Difference between revisions of "Moldova" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Infobox Country or territory
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{{Infobox Country
|native_name             = ''Republica Moldova''
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|native_name = ''Republica Moldova''
|conventional_long_name   = Republic of Moldova
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|conventional_long_name = Republic of Moldova
|common_name             = Moldova
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|common_name = Moldova
|map_caption             = {{map_caption |region=on the [[Europe|European continent]]}}
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| image_map = Europe_location_MDA.png
|national_motto          = ''Limba noastră-i o comoară''{{spaces|2}}<small><br/>''Our language is a treasure''</small>
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| map_caption = {{map_caption |region=on the [[Europe|European continent]]}}
|national_anthem         = ''[[Limba noastră]]''{{spaces|2}}<small>([[Romanian language|Romanian]])<br/>''Our Language''</small><!--Source: http://moldrpcv.tripod.com/id26.html—>
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|national_anthem = ''[[Limba Noastră]]''{{Spaces|2}}<br />Our Language''</small><!--Source: http://moldrpcv.tripod.com/id26.html—>
|image_flag               = Flag of Moldova.svg
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|image_flag = Flag of Moldova.svg
|image_coat               = Coat of arms of Moldova.svg
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|image_coat = Coat of arms of Moldova.svg
|image_map                = Europe_location_MDA.png
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|capital = [[File:Flagge-Chisinau-01-10.png|20px]] [[Chişinău]]
|capital                  = [[Chişinău]]
 
 
|latd=47 |latm=0 |latNS=N |longd=28 |longm=55 |longEW=E
 
|latd=47 |latm=0 |latNS=N |longd=28 |longm=55 |longEW=E
|largest_city             = capital
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|largest_city = capital
|official_languages       = [[Moldovan language|Moldovan]]{{smallsup|1}}<br/>([[Romanian language|Romanian]])<!--Please do not edit this entry (see talk page)—>
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| official_languages     = [[Romanian language|Romanian]] (also called [[Moldovan language|Moldovan]])<ref>[http://constcourt.md/libview.php?l=en&idc=7&id=512&t=/Overview/Press-Service/News/The-text-of-the-Declaration-of-Independence-prevails-over-the-text-of-the-Constitution| The text of the Declaration of Independence prevails over the text of the Constitution] ''Constitutional Court of Moldova'', December 5, 2013. Retrieved February 25, 2022.</ref><ref>Peter Roudik, [https://www.loc.gov/item/global-legal-monitor/2013-12-23/moldova-romanian-recognized-as-the-official-language/ Moldova: Romanian Recognized as the Official Language] ''Law Library of Congress'', December 23, 2013. Retrieved February 25, 2022.</ref>
|government_type         = [[Parliamentary republic]]
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| languages_type        = Recognized minority<br />languages<!--Protected and/or co-official (regional) languages—>
|leader_title1           = [[President of Moldova|President]]
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| languages              = [[Gagauz language|Gagauz]]<br /> [[Russian language|Russian]]<br />[[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]]
|leader_name1             = [[Vladimir Voronin]]
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|demonym = [[Moldovans|Moldovan, Moldavian]]
|leader_title2           = [[Prime Minister of Moldova|Prime Minister]]
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|government_type = [[Parliamentary republic]]
|leader_name2             = [[Vasile Tarlev]]
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|leader_title1 = [[President]]
|sovereignty_type        = [[Collapse of the Soviet Union|Independence]] {{nobold|from the [[Soviet Union]]}}
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|leader_name1 = [[Maia Sandu]]
|established_event1      = Date
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|leader_title2 = [[Prime Minister of Moldova|Prime Minister]]
|established_date1        = [[August 27]], [[1991]]
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|leader_name2 = [[Natalia Gavrilița]]  
|established_event2      = Finalised
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|leader_title3 = [[President of the Moldovan Parliament|President of the Parliament]]
|established_date2        = [[December 25]], [[1991]]
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|leader_name3 = [[Igor Grosu]]
|area                    = 33,843
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|sovereignty_type = [[History of Moldova|Consolidation]]
|areami²                  = 13,067 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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|established_event1 = [[Independence of Moldova|Declaration of Sovereignty]]
|area_rank               = 139th
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|established_date1 = June 23, 1990
|area_magnitude           = 1 E10
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|established_event2 = [[Declaration of Independence of Moldova|Declaration of Independence]] (from the Soviet Union)
|percent_water           = 1.4
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|established_date2 = <br /> August 27, 1991{{Smallsup|2}}
|population_estimate     = 4,320,490
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|area_km2 = 33,846 <!--
|population_estimate_year = 2007
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[[Recognized]] December 25, 1991 http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2008/cr08132.pdf —>
|population_estimate_rank = 121st<sup>3</sup>
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|area_sq_mi = 13,067 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
|population_census        = 3,383,332<sup>2</sup>
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|area_rank = 138th
|population_census_year  = 2004
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|area_magnitude = 1 E10
|population_density      = 111
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|percent_water = 1.4<br>(incl. Transnistria)
|population_densitymi²    = 339 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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| population_estimate   = 3,323,875  <ref name=CIA/>
|population_density_rank = 81st
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| population_census      =  
|GDP_PPP_year            = 2007
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| population_census_year =  
|GDP_PPP                  = $9,367 million
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| population_estimate_year = July 2021
|GDP_PPP_rank             = 141st
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| population_estimate_rank = 133rd
|GDP_PPP_per_capita       = $2,962
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| population_density_km2 = 85.5
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 135th
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| population_density_sq_mi = 234 <!-- Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]] —>
|HDI_year                = 2006
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| population_density_rank = 125th
|HDI                      = 0.694
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| GDP_PPP                = {{increase}} $36.886 billion<ref name="IMFWEORO"/>
|HDI_rank                = 114th
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| GDP_PPP_year          = 2021
|HDI_category            = <font color="#FFCC00">medium</font>
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| GDP_PPP_rank           = 134th
|Gini                     = 33.2
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita   = {{increase}} $14,257<ref name="IMFWEORO"/>
|Gini_year               = 2003
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 118th
|Gini_category           = <font color="#ffcc00">medium</font>
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| GDP_nominal            = {{increase}} $12.396 billion<ref name="IMFWEORO">[https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/weo-database/2021/October/World Economic Outlook Database, October 2021 Edition] ''International Monetary Fund''. Retrieved February 25, 2022.</ref>
|currency                 = [[Moldovan leu]]
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| GDP_nominal_year      = 2021
|currency_code           = MDL
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| GDP_nominal_rank      = 144th
|time_zone               = [[Eastern European Time|EET]]
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| GDP_nominal_per_capita = {{increase}} $4,791<ref name="IMFWEORO"/>
|utc_offset               = +2
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| GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = 123rd
|time_zone_DST           = [[Eastern European Summer Time|EEST]]
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| Gini                   = 25.7<ref name="wb-gini">CIA, [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/field/gini-index-coefficient-distribution-of-family-income/country-comparison/ Gini Index coefficient] ''World Factbook''. Retrieved February 25, 2022.</ref> <!-- number only —>
|utc_offset_DST           = +3
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| Gini_year             = 2018
|cctld                    = [[.md]]
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| Gini_change           = decrease <!-- increase/decrease/steady —>
|calling_code            = 373
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| Gini_ref              =
|footnote1                = [[Moldovan language|Moldovan]] is commonly considered another name for [[Romanian language|Romanian]] ([[Gagauz language|Gagauz]] and [[Russian language|Russian]] are also official in the [[Gagauzia|Gagauz Autonomous Region]]).
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|currency = [[Moldovan leu]]
|footnote2                = 2004 census from [http://www.statistica.md/recensamint.php?lang=ro National Bureau of Statistics]. Figure does not include [[Transnistria]] and [[Tighina]].
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|currency_code = MDL
|footnote3                = Ranking based on 2005 UN figure including Transnistria.  
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|time_zone = [[Eastern European Time|EET]]
 +
|utc_offset = +2
 +
|time_zone_DST = [[Eastern European Summer Time|EEST]]
 +
|utc_offset_DST = +3
 +
| ethnic_groups          = 75.1% [[Moldovans|Moldovan]]{{Smallsup|1}}<br /> 7.0% [[Romanians|Romanian]]<br />6.6% [[Ukrainians|Ukrainian]]<br />4.6% [[Gagauz people|Gagauz]]<br />4.1% [[Russians|Russian]]<br />1.9% [[Bulgarians|Bulgarian]]<br />0.7% Other<ref name=CIA>CIA, [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/moldova/ Moldova] ''World Factbook''. Retrieved February 25, 2022.</ref>
 +
| ethnic_groups_year    = 2014; excluding [[Transnistria]]
 +
|drives_on = right
 +
|cctld = [[.md]]
 +
|calling_code = [[Telephone numbers in Moldova|373]]
 +
|footnote1 = There is a controversy whether [[Moldovans]] and [[Romanians]] are the same of different ethnic groups.
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|footnote2 = Proclaimed. Finalized along with the [[dissolution of the USSR]] in December 1991.
 
}}
 
}}
  
The '''Republic of Moldova''' (''Republica Moldova'') is a [[landlocked]] country in [[Eastern Europe]], located between [[Romania]] to the west and [[Ukraine]] to the north, east and south.
 
  
Historically part of the [[Principality of Moldavia]], it was annexed by the [[Russian Empire]] in 1812. At the dissolution of the Russian Empire in 1918, it united with other Romanian lands in [[Greater Romania|Romania]]. After [[Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|being occupied]] by the [[Soviet Union]] in 1940, and changing hands in 1941 and 1944 during [[World War II]], it was known as the [[Moldavian SSR]] until 1991.  
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The '''Republic of Moldova''' ''(Republica Moldova)'' is a [[landlocked]] country in [[Eastern Europe]], located between [[Romania]] to the west and [[Ukraine]] to the north, east and south.
  
Moldova declared its independence from the Soviet Union on [[August 27]], [[1991]]. Although Moldova has been independent from the USSR since 1991, Russian forces have remained on Moldovan territory east of the Dniester River despite signing international obligations to withdraw.  
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Historically part of the [[Principality of Moldavia]], it was annexed by the [[Russian Empire]] in 1812, and when the Russian Empire dissolved in 1918, it united with other Romanian lands in [[Greater Romania|Romania]]. After being occupied by the [[Soviet Union]] in 1940, and changing hands in 1941 and 1944 during [[World War II]], it was known as the [[Moldavian SSR]] until 1991.  
  
It is the second-smallest of the former Soviet republics and the most densely populated. Moldova's economy resembles those of the [[Central Asia]]n republics, rather than those of the other states on the western edge of the former [[Soviet Union]].
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Moldova declared its independence from the Soviet Union on August 27, 1991, and although it has been independent since then, Russian forces have remained on Moldovan territory east of the Dniester River despite signing international obligations to withdraw.  
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{{toc}}
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Moldova has had a long and stormy history. There is ongoing controversy concerning the identity of ''[[Moldovans]]'' and ''[[Romanians]].'' Soviet-era agricultural practices have [[contamination|contaminated]] the environment. Moldova remains the poorest country in Europe—the presence of an illegal separatist regime in the Transnistria region continues to drag on the economy.
  
 
== Geography ==
 
== Geography ==
[[Image:Moldova map.gif|thumb|left|250px|General map of Moldova]]
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[[Image:Moldova map.gif|thumb|left|300px|General map of Moldova]]
At 13,067 square miles (33,843 square kilometers) Moldova is slightly larger than Maryland inthe United States.
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[[Image:View_of_the_Dniester(Nistru)_river_in_Tiraspol.jpg|thumb|right|400px|View of the Dniester river in Tiraspol.]]
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[[Image:Chisinau Center3.jpg|thumb|300px|Chişinău city center.]]
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At 13,067 square miles (33,843 square kilometers) Moldova is slightly larger than [[Maryland]] in the [[United States]]. The western border is formed by the Prut river, which joins the [[Danube]] before flowing into the [[Black Sea]]. In the north-east, the Dniester is the main river, flowing through the country from north to south.
  
The western border of Moldova is formed by the Prut river, which joins the [[Danube]] before flowing into the [[Black Sea]]. In the north-east, the Dniester is the main river, flowing through the country from north to south.
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The country is landlocked, even though it is close to the Black Sea. Most of Moldova's territory is a hilly plain cut deeply by many streams and rivers. Elevations never exceed 1410 feet (430 meters)—the highest point being the [[Dealul Bălăneşti]] at 1410 feet.  
  
The country is landlocked, even though it is very close to the Black Sea. Most of Moldova's territory is a hilly plain cut deeply by many streams and rivers. While the northern part of the country is hilly, elevations never exceed 1410 feet (430 metres)&mdash;the highest point being the [[Dealul Bălăneşti]] at 1410 feet.  
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Moldova's proximity to the [[Black Sea]] gives it a mild and sunny climate. The summers are warm and long, with temperatures averaging about 68°F (20°C), and the winters are relatively mild and dry, with January temperatures averaging 24.8°F (-4°C). Annual [[rain]]fall, which ranges from around 24 inches (600 millimeters) in the north to 16 inches (400mm) in the south, can vary greatly; long dry spells are not unusual. The heaviest rainfall occurs in early summer and again in October; heavy showers and thunderstorms are common. Because of the irregular terrain, heavy summer rains often cause erosion and river silting.
  
Moldova's proximity to the [[Black Sea]] gives it a mild and sunny climate. The summers are warm and long, with temperatures averaging about 68°F (20°C), and the winters are relatively mild and dry, with January temperatures averaging 24.8°F (-4°C). Annual rainfall, which ranges from around 24 inches (600 millimeters) in the north to 16 inches (400mm) in the south, can vary greatly; long dry spells are not unusual. The heaviest rainfall occurs in early summer and again in October; heavy showers and thunderstorms are common. Because of the irregular terrain, heavy summer rains often cause erosion and river silting.
 
[[Image:View_of_the_Dniester(Nistru)_river_in_Tiraspol.jpg|thumb|right|300px|View of the Dniester river in Tiraspol.]]
 
 
Drainage in Moldova is to the south, toward the [[Black Sea]] lowlands, and eventually into the Black Sea, but only eight rivers extend more than 100 kilometers. Moldova's main river, the Dniester, is navigable throughout almost the entire country, and in warmer winters it does not freeze over. The Prut River is a tributary of the [[Danube]] River, which it joins at the far southwestern tip of the country.  
 
Drainage in Moldova is to the south, toward the [[Black Sea]] lowlands, and eventually into the Black Sea, but only eight rivers extend more than 100 kilometers. Moldova's main river, the Dniester, is navigable throughout almost the entire country, and in warmer winters it does not freeze over. The Prut River is a tributary of the [[Danube]] River, which it joins at the far southwestern tip of the country.  
  
Underground water, extensively used for the republic's water supply, includes about 2,200 natural springs. The terrain favours construction of reservoirs.
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Underground [[water]], extensively used for the republic's water supply, includes about 2,200 natural springs. The terrain favors construction of reservoirs.
  
About 75 percent of Moldova is covered by a soil type called "black earth" or [[chernozem]]. In the northern highlands, more clay textured soils are found; in the south, red-earth soil is predominant. The soil becomes less fertile toward the south but can still support grape and sunflower production. Moldova's rich soil and [[temperate]] [[continental climate]] have made the country one of the most productive agricultural regions and a major supplier of agricultural products in the region.
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About 75 percent of Moldova is covered by a [[soil]] type called "black earth" or [[chernozem]]. In the northern highlands, more [[clay]]–textured soils are found; in the south, red-earth soil is predominant. The soil becomes less fertile toward the south but can still support [[grape]] and [[sunflower]] production. Moldova's rich soil and [[temperate]] [[continental climate]] have made the country one of the most productive [[agriculture|agricultural]] regions and a major supplier of agricultural products in the region.
  
Originally forested with virgin oak and beech forests called “Codru”, it has been extensively de-forested for agriculture during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Originally forested with virgin [[oak]] and [[beech]] [[forest]]s called “Codru,it was extensively de-forested for [[agriculture]] during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Moldovan fauna includes about 14,800 [[species]], out of which 461 species of vertebrates (70 [[mammal]]s, 281 [[bird]]s, 14 [[reptile]]s, 14 [[amphibia]]ns, 82 types of [[fish]]) and 14,339 species of [[invertebrate]]s, including some 12,000 species of [[insect]]s.  
  
Moldovan fauna includes about 14,800 species, out of which 461 species of vertebrates (mammals, 70; birds, 281; reptiles, 14; amphibians, 14; fishes, 82) and 14,339 species of invertebrates, including some 12,000 species of insects.  
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[[Landslide]]s are a frequently occurring natural hazard. Moldova's Soviet-era agricultural practices such as overuse of [[pesticide]]s and artificial fertilizers were intended to increase agricultural output without regard for the consequences. As a result, Moldova's soil and [[groundwater]] were contaminated by lingering chemicals, some of which (including [[DDT]]) have been banned in the West. In addition, poor farming methods, such as destroying [[forest]]s to plant vineyards, have contributed to the extensive [[soil erosion]] to which the country's rugged topography is already prone.
  
Landslides are a frequently ocurring natural hazard. There were 57 cases in 1998.
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[[Chişinău]] is the capital city and industrial and commercial center of Moldova. The largest city of Moldova and is located in the center of the country, on the river [[Bîc River|Bîc]]. Economically, the city is the most prosperous in Moldova and is one of the main industrial centers and transportation hubs of the region. Other cities are [[Tiraspol]] (in [[Transnistria]]), [[Bălţi]], and [[Tighina]].
 
 
Moldova's Soviet-era agricultural practices such as overuse of [[pesticide]]s and artificial fertilizers were intended to increase agricultural output at all costs, without regard for the consequences. As a result, Moldova's soil and groundwater were contaminated by lingering chemicals, some of which (including DDT) have been banned in the West.
 
[[Image:Chisinau Center3.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Chişinău city centre.]]
 
Such practices continue in Moldova. In the early 1990s, use of pesticides in Moldova averaged approximately 20 times that of other former Soviet republics and Western nations. In addition, poor farming methods, such as destroying forests to plant vineyards, have contributed to the extensive soil erosion to which the country's rugged topography is already prone.
 
 
 
[[Chişinău]] is the [[capital city]] and industrial and commercial centre of [[Moldova]]. With a population of 647,513, it is the largest city of Moldova and is located in the centre of the country, on the river [[Bîc River|Bîc]]. Economically, the city is the most prosperous in Moldova and is one of the main industrial centres and transportation hubs of the region. Other cities are [[Tiraspol]] (in [[Transnistria]]), [[Bălţi]] and [[Tighina]].
 
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
Moldova, known in the past as Bessarabia and Moldavia, has a long and stormy history. The territory has been inhabited for thousands of years. The Indo-European invasion occurred around the year 2000 b.c.e. The original inhabitants were [[Cimmerians]], and after them came [[Scythians]]. The people who settled in this area would later become the [[Dacia]]ns, [[Getae]] and [[Thyrsagetae]], these being [[Thracians|Thracian]] tribes.  
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Moldova, known in the past as [[Bessarabia]] and [[Moldavia]], has a long and stormy history. The territory has been inhabited for thousands of years. The Indo-European invasion occurred around the year 2000 B.C.E. The original inhabitants were [[Cimmerians]], and after them came [[Scythians]]. The people who settled in this area would later become the [[Dacia]]ns, [[Getae]] and [[Thyrsagetae]], these being [[Thracians|Thracian]] tribes.  
  
In the seventh century b.c.e., [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] settlers established colonies in the region, mostly along the [[Black Sea]] coast and traded with the locals. Also, Celts settled in the southern region, their main city being [[Aliobrix]].
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In the seventh century B.C.E., [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] settlers established colonies in the region, mostly along the [[Black Sea]] coast and traded with the locals. Also, [[Celts]] settled in the southern region, their main city being [[Aliobrix]] later called [[Budjak]].
  
 
===Romans resisted===
 
===Romans resisted===
[[Image:Dacia 82 BC.png|right|thumb|300px|Dacian Kingdom, during the rule of Burebista, 82 b.c.e.]]
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[[Image:Dacia 82 BC.png|right|thumb|400px|Dacian Kingdom, during the rule of Burebista, 82 B.C.E.]]
The first state that included the whole of Moldova was the [[Dacia]]n kingdom of [[Burebista]], a contemporary of [[Julius Caesar]], in the [[1st century BC]]. After his death, the state was divided into smaller pieces and was only unified in the Dacian kingdom of [[Decebalus]] in the first century c.e. Although this kingdom was defeated by the [[Roman Empire]] in 106 c.e., it was never part of the empire and the [[Free Dacians]] resisted the Roman conquerors. The Romans built defensive earthen walls in the south to defend the [[Scythia Minor]] province against invasions.
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The first state that included the whole of Moldova was the [[Dacia]]n kingdom of [[Burebista]], a contemporary of [[Julius Caesar]], in the first century B.C.E. After his death, the state was divided into smaller pieces and was only unified in the Dacian kingdom of [[Decebalus]] in the first century C.E. Although this kingdom was defeated by the [[Roman Empire]] in 106 C.E., it was never part of the empire and the [[Free Dacians]] resisted the Roman conquerors. The Romans built defensive earthen walls in the south to defend the [[Scythia Minor]] province against invasions.
  
The Roman Empire [[romanized]] parts of Dacia (via colonization and cultural influence) and some of the local tribes adopted the [[Latin|Latin language]] and customs. According to the theory of the Daco-Roman continuity the Latin culture and the Romance language ([[Romanian language|Romanian]]) would later spread to encompass the cultural area of the ancient Dacians, including the region of Bessarabia. Some historians deny this and the continuity of Latin-speaking people north of the Danube. For more, see [[Origin of Romanians]].
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The Roman Empire [[romanization|romanized]] parts of Dacia (via colonization and cultural influence) and some of the local tribes adopted the [[Latin|Latin language]] and customs. According to the theory of the Daco-Roman continuity, the Latin culture and the Romance language ([[Romanian language|Romanian]]) would later spread to encompass the cultural area of the ancient Dacians, including the region of Bessarabia. Some historians deny this continuity of Latin-speaking people north of the Danube.
 
 
In 270, the Roman authorities began to withdraw their forces from Dacia, due to the invading [[Goths]] and [[Carps]]. The [[Goths]], a Germanic tribe, poured into the Roman Empire through [[Budjak]] (in present day [[Ukraine]]), which due to its geographic position and characteristics (mainly [[steppe]]), was swept by various nomadic tribes. From the fifth century it was overrun in turn by the [[Huns]], the [[Eurasian Avars|Avars]], and the [[Bulgars]]. The influence of the Roman Empire ([[Eastern Roman Empire|East Roman]]) did not die out until 567.
 
  
 
===The Dark Ages===
 
===The Dark Ages===
From the third century until the eleventh century, the region was invaded numerous times. Those centuries were characterized by a terrible state of insecurity and mass movement of people. The period was later known as the "[[Dark Ages]]" of Europe.
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Lying on one of the principal land routes into Europe, from the third century until the eleventh century, the region was invaded numerous times. In 270, the Roman authorities began to withdraw their forces from Dacia, due to the invading [[Goths]] and [[Carps]]. The Goths, a Germanic tribe, poured into the Roman Empire through [[Budjak]] (in present day [[Ukraine]]), which due to its geographic position and characteristics (mainly [[steppe]]), was swept by various [[nomad]]ic tribes. From the fifth century it was overrun in turn by the [[Huns]], the [[Eurasian Avars|Avars]], and the [[Bulgars]]. Those centuries were characterized by a terrible state of insecurity and mass movement of people, and later came to be known as the "[[Dark Ages]]" of Europe.
  
In 561, the Avars captured the territory and executed the local ruler [[Mesamer]]. Following Avars, Slavs started to arrive in the region and establish settlements. Then, in 582, [[Onogur]] Bulgars settled in south-eastern Bessarabia and northern [[Dobruja]], from which they moved to [[Moesia]] under pressure from the [[Khazars]] and formed the nascent region of [[Bulgaria]]. With the rise of the Khazars' state in the east, the invasions began to diminish and it was possible to create larger states. The southern part of Moldova remained under the influence of the [[First Bulgarian Empire]] until to the end of ninth century.
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In 561, the Avars captured the territory and executed the local ruler [[Mesamer]]. Following Avars, Slavs started to arrive in the region and establish settlements. Then, in 582, [[Onogur]] Bulgars settled in south-eastern Bessarabia and northern [[Dobruja]], from which they moved to [[Moesia]] under pressure from the [[Khazars]] and formed the region of [[Bulgaria]]. With the rise of the Khazars' state in the east, the invasions began to diminish and it was possible to create larger states. The southern part of Moldova remained under the influence of the [[First Bulgarian Empire]] until to the end of ninth century.
  
Between the eighth and tenth centuries, the southern part of Moldova was inhabitated by people from [[Balkan-Dunabian culture]] (the culture of the First Bulgarian Empire). Between the ninth and thirteenth centuries, Bessarabia is mentioned in European and Slav chronicles as part of ''Bolohoveni'' (north) and ''[[Brodnici]]'' (south) Voevodates, believed to be [[Vlach]] ([[Romania in the Middle Ages#Medieval states|Romanian]]) principalities of the early Middle Ages.  
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Between the eighth and tenth centuries, the southern part of Moldova was inhabited by people from [[Balkan-Dunabian culture]] (the culture of the First Bulgarian Empire). Between the ninth and thirteenth centuries, Bessarabia is mentioned in European and Slav chronicles as part of ''Bolohoveni'' (north) and ''[[Brodnici]]'' (south) Voevodates, believed to be [[Vlach]] (Romanian) principalities of the early Middle Ages. Part of the area came under the rule of [[Kievan Rus]] between the tenth and twelfth centuries and later passed to the Galician princes.
  
The Tatar invasions of 1241 and 1290 led to a retreat of a big part of the population to the Eastern Carpathians and to Transylvania. Apparently, only one group east of the Prut river did not retreat to mountain regions at the time of the Tatar invasions. In later middle-age chronicles it is mentioned as the [[Tigheci]] "republic", situated near the modern town of [[Cahul]] in the southwest of Bessarabia, preserving its autonomy even during the later Principality of Moldavia.  
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The [[Tatar]] ([[Mongol]]ian) invasions of 1241 and 1290 led to a retreat of a big part of the population to the Eastern Carpathians and to [[Transylvania]]. From 1241 to the fourteenth century Moldavia was [[vassal state]] to the Tatars. The Mongols were defeated 1343.
 
 
The last large scale invasions were those of the Mongols and Tartars of 1241, 1290 and 1343, a small group of whom settled around the present day town of [[Orhei]] until they were pushed out in the 1390s.
 
  
 
===Principality of Moldavia===
 
===Principality of Moldavia===
[[Image:Tara Rumaneasca map.png|thumb|300px|left|During Wallachian rule, of Southern Bessarabia acquired its name. (1390 map)]]
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[[Image:Tara Rumaneasca map.png|thumb|400px|right|During Wallachian rule, of Southern Bessarabia acquired its name. (1390 map)]]
[[Image:Belgorod ua.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Cetatea Alba]] was one of the many important castles built by Moldavia in Bessarabia]]
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[[Image:Belgorod ua.jpg|thumb|right|400px|[[Cetatea Alba]] was one of the many important castles built by Moldavia in Bessarabia]]
After 1343  and the defeat of Mongols, the region was included in the principality of [[Moldavia]], which by 1392 established control over the fortresses of [[Cetatea Albă]] and [[Kilia, Ukraine|Chilia]], its eastern border becoming the river [[Dnister]] (Nistru in Romanian). In the latter part of the fourteenth century, the southern part of the region was for several decades part of [[Wallachia]]. The main dynasty of Walachia was called Basarab, from which the name Bessarabia originated.
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The Genoese founded fortified commercial outposts on the Dniester in the fourteenth century, paving the way for contact with Western culture. The region was included in the principality of [[Moldavia]], which by 1392 established control over the fortresses of [[Cetatea Albă]] and [[Kilia, Ukraine|Chilia]], its eastern border becoming the river [[Dnister]]. In the latter part of the fourteenth century, the southern part of the region was for several decades part of [[Wallachia]]. The main dynasty of [[Walachia]] was called Basarab, from which the name Bessarabia originated.
  
In the fifteenth century, the entire region was a part of the principality of Moldavia. [[Ştefan cel Mare]] (Stephen the Great) ruled between 1457 and 1504, a period of nearly 50 years during which he won 32 battles defending his country virtually against all his neighbours (mainly the Ottomans and the Tatars, but also the Hungarians and the Poles), while losing only two. During this period, after each victory, he raised a monastery or a church close to the battlefield honoring Christianity. Many of these battlefields and churches, as well as old fortresses are situated in Moldova (mainly along the Dniester river).
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In the fifteenth century, the entire region was a part of the principality of Moldavia. [[Ştefan cel Mare]] (Stephen the Great) ruled between 1457 and 1504, a period of nearly 50 years during which he won 32 battles defending his country against virtually all his neighbors (mainly the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]] and the [[Tatars]], but also the [[Hungarians]] and the Poles), while losing only two. During this period, after each victory, he raised a [[monastery]] or a [[church]] close to the battlefield honoring [[Christianity]]. Many of these battlefields and churches, as well as old [[fortress]]es are situated in Moldova (along the [[Dniester river]]).
  
 
===Turkish invasion===
 
===Turkish invasion===
[[Image:Humorstefan.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Stephen the Great, a miniature from the 1473 ''Gospel'' at Humor Monastery.]]
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[[Image:Humorstefan.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Stephen the Great, a miniature from the 1473 ''Gospel'' at Humor Monastery.]]
In 1484, the Turks invaded and captured [[Kilia, Ukraine|Chilia]] and [[Cetatea Albă]] (Akkerman in Turkish), and annexed the shoreline southern part of Bessarabia, which was then divided into two [[sanjak]]s (districts) of the Ottoman Empire. In 1538, the Ottomans annexed more Bessarabian land in the south as far as [[Tighina]], while the central and northern parts of Bessarabia, as part of the principality of [[Moldavia]] was formally a vassal of the Ottoman Empire.
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In 1484, the Turks invaded and captured [[Kilia, Ukraine|Chilia]] and [[Cetatea Albă]] (Akkerman in Turkish). This conquest was ratified by treaty (in 1503 and 1513), which annexed the shoreline southern part of Bessarabia, which was then divided into two ''sanjaks'' (districts) of the Ottoman Empire. In 1538, the Ottomans annexed more Bessarabian land in the south as far as [[Tighina]], while the central and northern parts of Bessarabia, as part of the principality of [[Moldavia]] was formally a vassal of the Ottoman Empire.
  
===Annexation by the Russian Empire===
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===Russian administration===
[[Image:Rom1793-1812.png|thumb|300px|right|The location of the principality of Moldavia. (1800 map, Moldavia in dark orange)]]
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[[Image:Rom1793-1812.png|thumb|400px|right|The location of the principality of Moldavia. (1800 map, Moldavia in dark orange)]]
Between 1711 and 1812, the Russian Empire occupied the region five times during wars between [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Russia]], and [[Austria]]. By the [[Treaty of Bucharest, 1812|Treaty of Bucharest]] of [[May 28]], [[1812]] — concluding the [[Russo-Turkish War, 1806-1812]] — the [[Ottoman Empire]] ceded the eastern half of the Principality of Moldavia to the [[Russian Empire]]. That region was then called ''Bessarabia''. Prior to that year, the name was used only for approximately its southern one quarter, which had been under direct Ottoman control since 1484.  
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Beginning with [[Peter I]] (the Great), the Russians occupied Moldavia five times between 1711 and 1812, during wars between the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Russia]], and [[Austria]]. By the [[Treaty of Bucharest, 1812|Treaty of Bucharest]] of May 28, 1812—concluding the [[Russo-Turkish War, 1806-1812]]—the Ottoman Empire ceded the eastern half of the Principality of Moldavia to the [[Russian Empire]]. That region was then called ''Bessarabia.'' Before that year, the name was used only for the southern area, which had been under direct [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] control since 1484.  
  
At the end of the [[Crimean War]], in 1856, by the [[Treaty of Paris (1856)|Treaty of Paris]], two districts of southern Bessarabia were returned to Moldavia, Russia lost access to the [[Danube]] river. Many localities, including [[Chişinău]] (Kishinev), now fell in the border area. In 1859, [[Moldavia]] and [[Wallachia]] united as the [[Kingdom of Romania]] in 1866, including the Southern part of Bessarabia.
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At the end of the [[Crimean War]], in 1856, by the [[Treaty of Paris (1856)|Treaty of Paris]], two districts of southern Bessarabia were returned to Moldavia, and The [[Russian Empire]] lost access to the [[Danube]] river. Many localities, including [[Chişinău]] (Kishinev), were in the border area. In 1859, [[Moldavia]] and [[Wallachia]] united as the [[Kingdom of Romania]], including the southern part of Bessarabia.
  
 
The Romanian War of Independence was fought in 1877-1878, with the help of the Russian allies. Although the treaty of alliance between Romania and Russia specified that Russia would respect the territorial integrity of Romania and not claim any part of Romania at the end of the war, by the [[Treaty of Berlin, 1878|Treaty of Berlin]], the Southern part of Bessarabia again came under the control of Russia.
 
The Romanian War of Independence was fought in 1877-1878, with the help of the Russian allies. Although the treaty of alliance between Romania and Russia specified that Russia would respect the territorial integrity of Romania and not claim any part of Romania at the end of the war, by the [[Treaty of Berlin, 1878|Treaty of Berlin]], the Southern part of Bessarabia again came under the control of Russia.
  
===Bessarabia colonised===
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The Russians granted autonomy in 1818 which remained until 1828. A Moldavian ''boyar'' had been made governor and a Moldavian archbishop installed. However, Moldavian [[peasant]]s fled across the Prut, to avoid any introduction of [[serfdom]]. A ''zemstvo'' system, introduced in 1869, provided some local autonomy. A policy of [[Russification]] in civil and ecclesiastical administration was pursued. Tsarist policy aimed at de-nationalization of the Romanian element by forbidding—after the 1860s—education and Mass in [[Romanian language]], but the effect was a low [[literacy]] rate (approximately 40 percent for males, and 10 percent for females).
Russian Tsarist authorities brought Bessarabia colonists such as [[Gagauz]] and [[Bessarabian Bulgars|Bulgars]] from the Ottoman Empire, [[Ukrainians]] from [[Podolia]], [[Germans]] from the [[Rhine]] regions, and encouraged the settlement of [[Lipovans]] from [[Russia]], [[Jews]] from [[Podolia]] and [[Galicia (Central Europe)|Galicia]], as well as Russian nobles or retired military. The Tsarist policy in Bessarabia was also partly aimed at de-nationalization of the Romanian element by forbidding after the 1860s education and Mass in Romanian, but the effect was a low literacy rate (approx. 40 percent for males, approx. 10 percent for females) rather than a denationalization.
 
 
 
===Revolution and the Moldavian ASSR===
 
[[Image:Romania_MASSR_1920.png|thumb|300px|right|Moldavian ASSR and Romania]]
 
Following the [[Russian Revolution of 1917]], Bessarabia proclaimed independence from Russia in 1918, and united with the Kingdom of Romania the same year. [[Transnistria]] did not join Romania. After the creation of the [[Soviet Union]] in December 1922, the Soviet government moved in 1924 to establish the [[Moldavian Autonomous Oblast]] on the lands to the east of the [[Dniester]] River in the [[Ukrainian SSR]]. The capital of the oblast was [[Balta, Ukraine|Balta]], situated in present-day [[Ukraine]]. Seven months later, the oblast was upgraded to the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic ([[Moldavian ASSR]]), even though its population was only 30 percent ethnic Romanian. The capital remained at Balta until 1929, when it was moved to [[Tiraspol]].
 
  
The area was quickly industrialized, and because of the lack of a qualified workforce and engineering and pedagogical cadres, a significant migration from other Soviet republics occurred, predominantly Ukrainians and Russians. In particular, in 1928, of 14,300 industrial workers only about 600 were Moldovans.  
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Russian Tsarist authorities brought colonists such as [[Gagauz]] and [[Bessarabian Bulgars|Bulgars]] from the Ottoman Empire, [[Ukrainians]] from [[Podolia]], [[Germans]] from the [[Rhine]] regions, and encouraged the settlement of [[Lipovans]] from [[Russia]], [[Jews]] from Podolia and [[Galicia (Central Europe)|Galicia]], as well as Russian nobles or retired military.  
  
[[Collectivization]] in MASSR was even more fast-paced than in Ukraine and was reported to be complete by summer 1931. This was accompanied by the deportation of about 2000 families to [[Kazakhstan]].
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[[Carol I of Romania|Carol I]] was crowned King of Romania on March 26, 1881. This formed a focus for Moldavian [[nationalism]], but no active movement developed in Bessarabia until after the [[Russian Revolution]] of 1905. [[Chisinau]] flourished, although its large Jewish population suffered in a [[pogrom]] in 1903.
  
In 1925 MASSR survived a famine, followed by the great famine of 1932-1933 (known as the [[Holodomor]] in Ukraine), with tens of thousands of Ukrainians and Romanians dying of starvation. During the famine thousands of inhabitants tried to escape over Dniester, despite the threat of being shot. On February 23, 1932, the most notable such incident happened near the village [[Olăneşti]], when 40 persons were shot. This was reported in European newspapers by survivors. The Soviet side reported this as an escape of "[[kulak]] elements subdued by Romanian propaganda".
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===World War I and the Russian Revolution===
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[[Image:Romania_MASSR_1920.png|thumb|400px|right|Moldavian ASSR and Romania]]
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Romania fought as Russia's ally during [[World War I]]. Bessarabia proclaimed support for the moderate Socialist Revolutionary [[Aleksandr Kerensky]] in March 1917, and in April the National Moldavian Committee demanded autonomy, land reform, and the use of the Romanian language. In November 1917, a council known as the ''Sfatul Tarii (Sfat)'' was set up modeled on the Kiev ''Rada.'' On December 15, 1917, the ''Sfat'' proclaimed Bessarabia an autonomous constituent republic of the [[Federation of Russian Republics]].
  
===World War II===
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Disorder caused by revolutionary Russian soldiers prompted the ''Sfat'' to seek Romanian military help, which prompted a Bolshevik occupied Chisinau in January 1918. Romanian forces drove the [[Bolsheviks]] out within two weeks, and on February 6 the Sfat proclaimed Bessarabia an independent Moldavian republic, cutting ties with Russia. Bessarabia united with the [[Kingdom of Romania]] the same year, and the union was recognized by a treaty, that was part of the [[Paris Peace Conference]], signed on October 28, 1920, by Romania, Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan. [[Transnistria]] did not join Romania.
On June 28, 1940, in accordance with the secret protocol of the [[Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact]] with [[Nazi Germany]], the [[Soviet Union]] forced Romania to evacuate its administration from Bessarabia and Northern [[Bukovina]] and immediately [[Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|annexed these territories]]. The southern and northern parts (which had significant Slavic and Turkic minorities) were transferred to the [[Ukrainian SSR]]. At the same time, Transnistria (where ethnic [[Romanians]] were the largest ethnic group), was joined with the remaining territory to form the [[Moldavian SSR|Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic]], coterminous with the present-day Moldova.  
 
  
===Postwar reestablishment of Soviet control===
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===Moldavian ASSR created===
{{main|Moldavian SSR}}
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The Soviet Union, created in December 1922, did not recognize Romania's right to the province, and in 1924 it established the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic on land to the east of the [[Dniester]] River in the [[Ukrainian SSR]]. The Soviet government in 1924 established the [[Moldavian Autonomous Oblast]], the capital of which was [[Balta, Ukraine|Balta]], situated in present-day [[Ukraine]]. Seven months later, the oblast was upgraded to the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic ([[Moldavian ASSR]]), even though its population was only 30 percent ethnic Romanian. The capital remained at Balta until 1929, when it was moved to [[Tiraspol]]. The frontier along the Dniester river was closed,  
The territory remained part of the [[Soviet Union|USSR]] after [[World War II|WWII]] as the [[Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic]] and the state imposed a harsh denationalization policy toward the native Romanian population. Several social and economic groups were targeted to be murdered, imprisoned, and deported to [[Siberia]] due to their economic situation, political views, or ties to the former regime. Secret police struck at nationalist groups; and ethnic Russians and Ukrainians were encouraged to immigrate to the Moldavian SSR, especially to [[Transnistria]]. At the same time, most of the Moldovan industry was built in Transnistria, while in Bessarabia mostly agriculture was developed.
 
  
The government's policies - requisitioning large amounts of agricultural products despite a poor harvest - induced a famine - with 300,000 victims - following the catastrophic drought of 1945-1947, and political and academic positions were given to members of non-Romanian ethnic groups (only 14% of the Moldavian SSR's political leaders were ethnic Romanians in 1946).
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The area was quickly industrialized, and because of the lack of a qualified workforce and engineering and pedagogical cadres, a significant migration from other Soviet republics occurred, predominantly Ukrainians and Russians. In particular, in 1928, of 14,300 industrial workers only about 600 were Moldovans. [[Collectivization]] in MASSR was complete by summer 1931. This was accompanied by the deportation of about 2000 families to [[Kazakhstan]].
  
A wave of repression was aimed at the Romanian intellectuals that decided to remain in Moldova after the war and propaganda was directed against everything that was Romanian.
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In 1925, MASSR survived a famine, followed by the great famine of 1932-1933 (known as the [[Holodomor]] in Ukraine), with tens of thousands of Ukrainians and Romanians dying of starvation. During the famine thousands of inhabitants tried to escape over Dniester, despite the threat of being shot. On February 23, 1932, the most notable such incident happened near the village [[Olăneşti]], when 40 persons were shot. This was reported in European newspapers by survivors. The Soviet side reported this as an escape of "[[kulak]] elements subdued by Romanian propaganda."
  
The conditions imposed during the reestablishment of Soviet rule became the basis of deep resentment toward Soviet authorities — a resentment that soon manifested itself. During [[Leonid I. Brezhnev]]'s 1950-1952 tenure as the First Secretary of the [[Communist Party of Moldova|Communist Party of Moldavia]] (CPM), he put down a rebellion of ethnic Romanians by killing or deporting thousands of people and instituting forced [[collectivization]]. Although Brezhnev and other CPM first secretaries were largely successful in suppressing Moldovan/Romanian nationalism, [[Mikhail S. Gorbachev]]'s administration facilitated the revival of the movement in the region. His policies of [[glasnost]] and [[perestroika]] created conditions in which national feelings could be openly expressed and in which the Soviet republics could consider reforms.
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===Romanian Bessarabia===
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Despite Romanian government land reforms that limited the maximum holding to 247 acres (100 hectares), Romanian Bessarabia languished economically, partly as a result of a closed border along the Dniester and the loss of Odessa as a port.  
  
In 1970s and '80s Moldova received substantial investment from the budget of the USSR to develop industrial, scientific facilities, as well as housing. In 1971 the [[Council of Ministers of the USSR]] adopted a decision "About the measures for further development of Kishinev city" that secured more than one billion [[Russian ruble|rubles]] of investment from the USSR budget. Subsequent decisions that directed enormous wealth and brought highly qualified specialists from all over the USSR to develop Moldova. Such an allocation of USSR assets was influenced by the fact that [[Leonid Brezhnev]] (the effective ruler of the USSR from 1964 to 1982) was the Communist Party First Secretary in the [[Moldavian SSR]] in 1950s. These investments stopped in 1991 with the [[Belavezha Accords|dissolution of the Soviet Union]], when Moldova became independent.
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===World War II===
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On June 28, 1940, in accordance with the [[Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact]] with [[Nazi Germany]], Soviet troops marched in forcing Romania to evacuate its administration from Bessarabia and Northern [[Bukovina]]. On July 11, Transnistria (where ethnic [[Romanians]] were the largest ethnic group), was joined to part of the autonomous Moldavian republic across the Dniester to form, in August, a Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic (S.S.R.), coterminous with the present-day Moldova, with Chisinau as its capital. The southern and northern parts (which had significant Slavic and Turkic minorities) were transferred to the [[Ukrainian SSR]].  
  
===Increasing self-expression===
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Under an agreement between [[Germany]] and the [[Soviet Union]], many Moldavians left, some [[Jew]]s entered, and the whole German population was moved to western [[Poland]]. In July 1941, Romania, Germany's ally against the Soviet Union, reoccupied Bessarabia. By December 1942, it was governed as Romanian territory, although not formally annexed. Moldavian peasants from Transnistria, a new Romanian province between the Dniester and the Southern Buh, were settled on the farms of departed Germans. Numerous Jews were killed or deported.
[[Image:Major ethnics groups in Moldova 1989.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Distribution of major ethnic groups in Moldavian SSR, 1989]]
 
In this climate of openness, political self-assertion escalated in the Moldavian SSR in 1988. The year 1989 saw the formation of the Moldovan Popular Front (commonly called the Popular Front), an association of independent cultural and political groups that had finally gained official recognition. Large demonstrations by ethnic Romanians led to the designation of Romanian as the official language and the replacement of the head of the CPM. However, opposition was growing to the increasing influence of ethnic Romanians, especially in Transnistria, where the Yedinstvo-Unitatea (Unity) Intermovement had been formed in 1988 by the Slavic minorities, and in the south, where Gagauz Halkî (Gagauz People), formed in November 1989, came to represent the [[Gagauz]], a Turkic-speaking minority there (see Ethnic Composition, this ch.).
 
  
The first democratic elections to the Moldavian SSR's [[Supreme Soviet]] were held [[25 February]] [[1990]]. Runoff elections were held in March. The Popular Front won a majority of the votes. After the elections, [[Mircea Snegur]], a communist, was elected chairman of the Supreme Soviet; in September he became president of the republic. The reformist government that took over in May 1990 made many changes that did not please the minorities, including changing the republic's name in June from the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic to the Soviet Socialist Republic of Moldova and declaring it sovereign the same month.
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===The Moldavian SSR===
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The [[Soviet Union]] occupied Bessarabia in 1944, and the territory remained part of the [[Soviet Union|USSR]] after [[World War II|WWII]] as the [[Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic]]. Controlled from [[Moscow]], the Communist Party promoted industrialization and the collectivization of agriculture, abolishing [[private ownership]] of land, and of the means of production and distribution. [[Secret police]] struck at nationalist groups. A wave of repression was aimed at the Romanian intellectuals who decided to remain in Moldova after the war and propaganda was directed against everything that was Romanian. Ethnic Russians and Ukrainians were encouraged to immigrate to the Moldavian SSR, especially to [[Transnistria]]. At the same time, most of the Moldovan [[industry]] was built in Transnistria, while in Bessarabia mostly [[agriculture]] was developed.
  
===Secession of Gagauzia and Transnistria===
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Government requisitioning of large amounts of agricultural products despite a poor harvest - induced a [[famine]] - with 300,000 victims - following the catastrophic drought of 1945-1947, and political and academic positions were given to members of non-Romanian ethnic groups (only 14 percent of the Moldavian SSR's political leaders were ethnic Romanians in 1946).
In August 1990 the [[Gagauz]] declared a separate "Gagauz Republic" (Gagauz-Yeri) in the south, around the city of Comrat. In September the people on the east bank of the [[Dniester River]] (with mostly Slavic population) proclaimed the "Dnestr Moldavian Republic" (commonly called the "Dnestr Republic") in Transnistria, with its capital at Tiraspol. Although the Supreme Soviet immediately declared these declarations null, both "republics" went on to hold elections. Stepan Topal was elected president of the "Gagauz Republic" in December 1991, and Igor' N. Smirnov was elected president of the "Dnestr Republic" in the same month.
 
  
Approximately 50,000 armed Moldovan nationalist volunteers went to Transnistria, where widespread violence was temporarily averted by the intervention of the Russian 14th Army. (The Soviet 14th Army, now the Russian 14th Army, had been headquartered in Chişinău under the High Command of the Southwestern Theater of Military Operations since 1956.) Negotiations in Moscow among the Gagauz, the Transnistrian Slavs, and the government of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Moldova failed, and the government refused to join in further negotiations.
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The conditions imposed became the basis of deep resentment toward Soviet authorities. During [[Leonid I. Brezhnev]]'s 1950-1952 tenure as the First Secretary of the [[Communist Party of Moldova|Communist Party of Moldavia]] (CPM), he put down a rebellion of ethnic Romanians by killing or deporting thousands of people and instituting forced [[collectivization]].  
  
In May 1991, the country's official name was changed to the Republic of Moldova (Republica Moldova). The name of the Supreme Soviet also was changed, to the Moldovan Parliament.
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However, during Brezhnev's tenure as the effective ruler of the USSR from 1964 to 1982, Moldova received substantial investment from the USSR to develop industrial, scientific facilities, as well as housing.
  
===Independence===
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===Popular front formed===
[[Image:Snegur ii.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Mircea Snegur, president of Moldova]]
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[[Image:Major ethnics groups in Moldova 1989.jpg|thumb|300px|Distribution of ethnic groups in Moldavian SSR, 1989]]
image=Snegur ii.JPG
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Although Brezhnev and other CPM first secretaries were largely successful in suppressing Moldovan/Romanian [[nationalism]], [[Mikhail Gorbachev]]'s administration facilitated the revival of the movement in the region. Gorbachev was the last leader of the [[Soviet Union]], serving from 1985 until its collapse in 1991. His attempts at reform helped end the [[Cold War]], ended the political supremacy of the [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union]] (CPSU), and dissolved the Soviet Union. His policies of [[glasnost]] (openness) and [[perestroika]] (economic restructuring) created conditions in which national feelings could be openly expressed and in which the Soviet republics could consider reforms.
During the 1991 August coup d'état in Moscow against [[Mikhail Gorbachev]], commanders of the Soviet Union's Southwestern Theater of Military Operations attempted to impose a state of emergency in Moldova. They were overruled by the Moldovan government, which declared its support for Russian president [[Boris Yeltsin]], who led the counter-coup in Moscow. On [[27 August]] [[1991]], following the coup's collapse, Moldova declared its independence from the Soviet Union.
 
  
In October, Moldova began to organize its own armed forces. The Soviet Union was falling apart quickly, and Moldova had to rely on itself to prevent the spread of violence from the "Dnestr Republic" to the rest of the country. The December elections of Stepan Topal and [[Igor Smirnov]] as presidents of their respective "republics," and the official dissolution of the Soviet Union at the end of the year, led to increased tensions in Moldova.
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The Moldovan Popular Front (commonly called the Popular Front), an association of independent cultural and political groups, formed in 1989. Large demonstrations by ethnic Romanians led to Romanian being designated the official language and the head of the CPM replaced. However, the increasing influence of ethnic Romanians, especially in Transnistria, prompted Slavic minorities to form the Yedinstvo-Unitatea (Unity) Intermovement in 1988, and in the south, the [[Gagauz]], a Turkic-speaking minority, formed Gagauz Halkî (Gagauz People), in 1989.
  
At the end of 1991, an ex-communist reformer, [[Mircea Snegur]], won an election for the presidency. Four months later, the country achieved formal recognition as an independent state at the [[United Nations]].
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The first democratic elections to the Moldavian SSR's [[Supreme Soviet]] were held on February 25, 1990. The Popular Front won a majority. [[Mircea Snegur]], a communist, was elected chairman of the Supreme Soviet, and in September he became president of the republic. The reformist government that took over in May 1990 made changes that did not please the minorities, including changing the republic's name to the Soviet Socialist Republic of Moldova.
  
Following independence in 1991, the Romanian tricolor with a coat-of-arms was used as the state flag, and [[Deşteaptă-te române!]], the Romanian anthem also became the anthem of Moldova. During that period a [[Movement for unification of Romania and the Republic of Moldova]] began in each country.
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===Gagauzia and Transnistria secede===
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In August 1990, the [[Gagauz]] declared a separate "Gagauz Republic" (Gagauz-Yeri) in the south, around the city of Comrat. In September the people on the east bank of the [[Dniester River]] (with mostly [[Slavic]] population) proclaimed the "Dnestr Moldavian Republic" (commonly called the "Dnestr Republic") in Transnistria, with its capital at Tiraspol. Although the Supreme Soviet immediately declared these declarations null, both "republics" went on to hold elections. Meanwhile, approximately 50,000 armed Moldovan nationalist volunteers went to Transnistria, where widespread violence was temporarily averted by the intervention of the Russian 14th Army, headquartered in Chişinău.
  
In 1992, Moldova became involved in a brief [[War of Transnistria|conflict]] against local insurgents in [[Transnistria]], who were aided by Russian armed forces and Ukrainian [[Cossacks]]. A ceasefire for this war was negotiated by presidents [[Mircea Snegur]] and [[Boris Yeltsin]] in July. A demarcation line was to be maintained by a tripartite peacekeeping force (composed of Moldovan, Russian, and Transnistrian forces), and Moscow agreed to withdraw its 14th Army if a suitable constitutional provision were made for Transnistria. Also, Transnistria would have a special status within Moldova and would have the right to secede if Moldova decided to reunite with Romania.
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===Transnistria declares independence===
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The part of Moldova east of the [[Dniester]] River, [[Transnistria]], declared independence from Moldova, but within the Soviet Union on September 2, 1990, as the [[Pridnestrovian Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic]]. The inhabitants, which included a larger proportion of ethnic Russians and Ukrainians, feared the rise of nationalism in Moldova and the country's expected unification with [[Romania]] at the dissolution of the USSR. The declaration was declared void by then-Soviet President [[Mikhail Gorbachev]].  
  
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===Moldova declares independence===
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[[Image:rom-bas.gif|thumb|400px|righ|Map of a proposed unified [[Romania]]n-[[Moldova]]n state: the so-called ''"Belkovski proposal"'' (a Romanian-Moldovan political union excluding [[Transnistria]]).]]
  
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In May 1991, the country's official name was changed to the Republic of Moldova (Republica Moldova). The name of the Supreme Soviet also was changed, to the Moldovan Parliament. During the 1991 August [[coup d'état]] in Moscow against [[Mikhail Gorbachev]], commanders of the Soviet Union's Southwestern Theater of Military Operations attempted to impose a state of emergency in Moldova. They were overruled by the Moldovan government, which declared its support for Russian president [[Boris Yeltsin]], who led the counter-coup in Moscow. On August 27, 1991, after the coup's collapse, Moldova declared its [[independence]] from the Soviet Union.
  
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[[Romania]] was the first state to recognize the independent [[Republic of Moldova]] – only a few hours, in fact, after the declaration of independence was issued by the Moldovan parliament. Movements for unification of Romania and the Republic of Moldova began in each country. In December of 1991, Moldova became a member of the post-Soviet [[Commonwealth of Independent States]] along with most of the former Soviet republics. Declaring itself a neutral state, it did not join the commonwealth's military branch. At the end of that year, an ex-communist reformer, [[Mircea Snegur]], won an unchallenged election for the presidency. Three months later, the country achieved formal recognition as an independent state at the [[United Nations]].
  
xxxx
+
In mid April 1992, in accordance with the agreements concerning the split of the military equipment of the former Soviet Union, Moldova created its own Defense Ministry. Most of the 14th Soviet Army's military equipment was to be retained by Moldova. In October, Moldova began to organize its own armed forces. The Soviet Union was falling apart quickly, and Moldova had to rely on itself to prevent the spread of [[violence]] from the "Dnestr Republic" to the rest of the country.
  
 +
===War of Transnistria===
 +
In March 1992, a brief war between Moldovan and Transnistrian separatist forces started in the region. Volunteers came from Russia and Ukraine to help the separatist side. A ceasefire was negotiated by presidents [[Mircea Snegur]] and [[Boris Yeltsin]] in July. A demarcation line was to be maintained by a tripartite peacekeeping force (composed of Moldovan, Russian, and Transnistrian forces), and Moscow agreed to withdraw its 14th Army if a suitable constitutional provision were made for Transnistria. Also, Transnistria would have a special status within Moldova and would have the right to secede if Moldova decided to reunite with Romania.
  
 +
===Communists dominate different coalitions===
 +
During the first ten years of independence, Moldova was governed by coalitions of different parties, lead mostly by former communist officials. On July 28, 1992, Parliament ratified a new constitution, which went into effect August 27, 1994, and provided substantial autonomy to Transnistria and to Gagauzia. Russia and Moldova signed an agreement in October 1994 on the withdrawal of Russian troops from Transnistria, but the Russian government did not ratify it and another stalemate ensued. Although the cease-fire remained in effect, further negotiations that included the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe and the [[United Nations]] made little progress.
  
In August 1991, Moldova declared its independence, and in December of that year became a member of the post-Soviet [[Commonwealth of Independent States]] along with most of the former Soviet republics. Declaring itself a neutral state, it did not join the [[Commonwealth of Independent States]] (CIS) military branch. At the end of that year, an ex-communist reformer, [[Mircea Snegur]], won an unchallenged election for the presidency. Three months later, the country achieved formal recognition as an independent state at the [[United Nations]].  
+
The [[Partnership and Cooperation Agreement]] with the [[European Union]] (EU) came into force in July 1998 for an initial period of ten years. It established the institutional framework for bilateral relations, set the principal common objectives, and called for activities and dialogue in a number of policy areas.
  
The part of Moldova east of the [[Dniester]] River, [[Transnistria]], which included a larger proportion of ethnic Russians and Ukrainians, claimed independence in 1990, fearing the rise of nationalism in Moldova and the country's expected unification with [[Romania]] at the dissolution of the USSR. This caused a brief [[War of Transnistria|military conflict]] between Moldova and Transnistria in 1992. Russian <!--and Ukrainian{{cn}} without citation, this is very dubious—> forces intervened on the Transnistrian side, and Russian troops of the 14th Army remain there to this day. Negotiations between the Transnistrian and Moldovan leaders have been going on under the mediation of [[OSCE]], Russia, Ukraine, [[European Union]], and [[USA]]. Despite the expectations of the [[Popular Front of Moldova]], Moldova did not unite with Romania in 1991. In the early 1990s, the future of Moldova was a source of tension in Romania's relations with Russia. A March 1994 [[referendum]] of the new constitution saw an overwhelming majority of voters favoring continued independence.  
+
In the 2001 elections, the Communist Party of Moldova won the majority of seats in the parliament and appointed [[Vladimir Voronin]] as president. Relationships between Moldova and [[Russia]] deteriorated in November 2003 over the Transnistrian conflict. In the following election, held in 2005, the Communist party made a 180 degree turn and was re-elected on a pro-Western platform, with Voronin being re-elected to a second term as a president.
  
In 2001, the country became a member of the [[WTO]]. During the first 10 years of independence, Moldova was governed by coalitions of different parties, lead mostly by former communist officials which turned to democracy. In the 2001 elections, the Communist Party of Moldova won the majority of seats in the Parliament and appointed [[Vladimir Voronin]] as president. After few years in power, relationships between Moldova and [[Russia]] deteriorated in November 2003 over the Transnistrian conflict. In the following election, held in 2005, the Communist party made a 180 degree turn and was re-elected on a pro-Western platform, with Voronin being re-elected to a second term as a president. Since 1999, Moldova has constantly affirmed its desire to join the European Union, however it is not even part of the accession process yet, and the country's internal and foreign trade policy remains divided between the influence of Russia and that of the EU and USA.
+
== Government and politics ==
 +
[[Image:Chisinau GouvernamentalBuilding.jpg|right|thumb|400px|Government Building in Chişinău.]]
 +
The 1994 constitution, which replaced the 1978 framework for a Soviet-style government, established Moldova as a parliamentary democracy, with a unicameral parliament of 104 members directly elected for four-year terms. The president, who is directly elected for a five-year term, and is the head of state and the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The president shares executive power with the Council of Ministers (cabinet), which is led by the prime minister, who is designated by the president (after consultation with the parliamentary majority) and approved by parliament. The council implements domestic and foreign policy.  
  
== Government ==
+
The position of the break-away republic of [[Transnistria]], relations with [[Romania]], and integration into the [[European Union]] dominate the political agenda.
{{main|Politics of Moldova}}
 
xxfrom introxxx
 
Moldova is a [[parliamentary democracy]] with a [[President of Moldova|President]] as its [[head of state]] and a [[List of Prime Ministers of Moldova|Prime Minister]] as its [[head of government]]. The country is a member state of the [[United Nations]], [[WTO]], [[OSCE]],  [[GUAM]], [[Commonwealth of Independent States|CIS]], [[BSEC]] and other [[international organization]]s.<!--to continue :) WHO, IMO, IAEA. As this is article's leader, perhaps give comprehensive list in a section below? Sure, :-) esp. since IAEA etc are sub-organizations of UN—>
 
xxx
 
The Republic of Moldova is a relatively new state, which became independent after the break-up of the former Soviet Union. Historically, it traces its statehood to the medieval [[Principality of Moldavia]] (jointly with an equal size territory inside [[Romania]]), and to the [[Moldavian Democratic Republic]] (1917-1918), which chose to join Romania in 1918. In 1940, the Soviets
 
created a [[Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|puppet government]] under the name [[Moldavian SSR]], which they placed inside the [[USSR]] as one of the 15 soviet republics. On [[23 June]], [[1990]], the first democratically elected parliament proclaimed Moldova's sovereignty, and on [[27 August]], [[1991]] the country's separation from the USSR, and independence.  
 
  
===Political system===
+
The judicial system comprises the Supreme Court of Justice (with members appointed by parliament), a Court of Appeal, and lower courts (whose members are appointed by the president). The Higher Magistrates' Council nominates judges and oversees their transfer and promotion.  
The [[unicameral]] Moldovan  [[parliament]] (''{{lang|ro|Parlament}}'') has 101 seats, and its members are elected by popular vote every four years. The parliament then elects a [[president]], who functions as the [[head of state]]. The president appoints a [[prime minister]] as [[head of government]] who in turn assembles a [[cabinet (government)|cabinet]], both subject to parliamentary approval. There is a large variety of political parties and movements in Moldova. [[As of 2007]], the major parties and movements are:{{Fact|date=September 2007}}
 
  
*[[Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova]]
+
=== Administrative divisions ===
*[[Christian-Democratic People's Party (Moldova)|Popular Christian Democratic Front]]
+
[[Image:moldadm.png|thumb|right|300px|Administrative divisions of Moldova]]
*[[Movement for a Democratic and Prosperous Moldova]]
+
Moldova is divided into 32 districts (''raioane,'' singular ''raion''); three municipalities ([[Bălţi]], [[Chişinău]], [[Tighina]]); and two autonomous regions ([[Găgăuzia]] and [[Transnistria]]). The cities of [[Comrat]] and [[Tiraspol]] also have municipality status, however not as first-tier subdivisions of Moldova, but as parts of the regions of Găgăuzia and Transnistria, respectively.
*[[Democratic Forces Party]]
 
*[[Party of Renaissance and Conciliation]]
 
*[[Social Democratic party of Moldova]]
 
*[[Liberal Party of Moldova]]
 
  
===2001 Parliamentary Elections===
+
[[Transnistria]] is legally a part of Moldova, as its independence is not recognized by any country, although in fact it is not controlled by the Moldovan government. It is administered by an unrecognized breakaway authority seeking closer ties with [[Russia]], and its status remains disputed.
*[[Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova]] (PCRM) (50.07% votes, 71 mandates)
 
*[[Party Alliance Our Moldova|Electoral Bloc "Braghiş Alliance"]] (BEAB) (13.36% votes, 19 mandates)
 
*[[Christian-Democratic People's Party (Moldova)|Christian Democratic People's Party]] (CDPP) (8.24% votes, 11 mandates)
 
  
===2005 Parliamentary Elections===
+
Elected district councils coordinate elected town and village councils and mayors who administer local government. The constitution guarantees the right to “preserve, develop and express citizens' ethnic, cultural, and linguistic and religious identity” and grants special autonomy to the Russian region on the left bank of the Dniester and to the Gagauz region.
*[[Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova]] (PCRM) (45.98% votes, 56 mandates)
 
*[[Electoral Bloc “Moldova Democrată”]] (BMD) (28.53% votes, 34 mandates)
 
*[[Christian-Democratic People's Party (Moldova)|Christian Democratic People's Party (CDPP)]] (9.07% votes, 11 mandates)
 
  
===Relations with Romania/Identity Politics===
+
===Relations with Romania===
{{main|Relations of Moldova with Romania}}
+
In 1989, [[Romanian language|Romanian]] became the official language of Moldova, and after independence in 1991, the Romanian tricolor with a coat-of-arms (inspired by the [[coat of arms of Romania]]) was used as the flag, and the Romanian national anthem became the anthem of Moldova. Certain groups in both countries expected unification, and a [[Movement for unification of Romania and the Republic of Moldova]] began in both countries. Dual citizenship became an increasingly important issue following the 2003 local elections, and in November 2003, the Moldovan parliament passed a law that allowed Moldovans to acquire dual citizenship.
  
In 1989, [[Romanian language|Romanian]] became the official language of Moldova (former Romanian [[Bessarabia]]). Following independence in 1991, the Romanian tricolor with a coat-of-arms (inspired by the [[coat of arms of Romania]]) was used as the flag, and [[Deşteaptă-te române!]], the Romanian national anthem, also became the anthem of Moldova.  In those times, there was an expectation among certain groups in both countries that they were to be united soon, and a [[Movement for unification of Romania and the Republic of Moldova]] began in both countries in the early 1990s. Dual citizenship became an increasingly important issue following the 2003 local elections, and in November 2003, the Moldovan parliament passed a law that allowed Moldovans to acquire dual citizenship.
+
However, the initial enthusiasm in Moldova was tempered and, starting in 1993, Moldova started to distance itself from Romania. The constitution adopted in 1994 used the term "Moldovan language" instead of "Romanian" and changed the national anthem to [[Limba noastră]]. The 1996 attempt by Moldovan president Mircea Snegur to change the official language to "Romanian" was dismissed by the Moldovan Parliament as "promoting Romanian expansionism."
  
In the address to the Romanian parliament in February 1991, [[Mircea Snegur]], the Moldovan president spoke about a common identity of the [[Moldovans]] and [[Romanians]], referring to the "Romanians of both sides of the [[Prut River]]" and "Sacred Romanian lands occupied by the Soviets". Historically, the Romanian government had provided scholarships to Moldovan students (via a common scheme with the Moldovan Ministry of Education) at all educational levels to attend Romanian schools and universities.
+
===Military===
 
+
The military consists of ground forces, rapid reaction forces, air and air defense forces. Moldova has accepted all relevant arms control obligations of the former [[Soviet Union]]. On October 30, 1992, Moldova ratified the [[Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe]], which establishes comprehensive limits on key categories of conventional military equipment and provides for the destruction of weapons in excess of those limits. It acceded to the provisions of the nuclear [[Non-Proliferation Treaty]] in October 1994 in [[Washington, DC]]. It does not have nuclear, biological, or chemical weapons. Moldova joined the [[North Atlantic Treaty Organisation]]'s [[Partnership for Peace]] on March 16, 1994.
However, the initial enthusiasm in Moldova was tempered and, starting in 1993, Moldova started to distance itself from Romania. The constitution adopted in 1994 used the term "Moldovan language" instead of "Romanian" and changed the national anthem to [[Limba noastră]]. The 1996 attempt by Moldovan president Mircea Snegur to change the official language to "Romanian" was dismissed by the Moldovan Parliament as "promoting Romanian expansionism".
 
  
 
=== Foreign relations ===
 
=== Foreign relations ===
{{main|Foreign relations of Moldova}}
+
[[Image:GouvernamentalBuilding  Chisinau.JPG|thumb|right|300px|A government building.]]
The government has stated that Moldova has European aspirations but there has been little progress toward [[European Union|EU]] membership. On [[May 1]], [[2004]] many EU enthusiasts waving the EU flags found their flags confiscated by police and some were arrested under the clause of "anti-nationalism." During her first bilateral visit to Moldova, [[European Commissioner for External Relations and European Neighbourhood Policy]], [[Benita Ferrero-Waldner]] opened the new Delegation of the [[European Commission]] to Moldova on [[6 October]], to be headed by [[Cesare De Montis]]. A [[Partnership and Cooperation Agreement]] (PCA) with EU is the legal basis for EU relations with Moldova. The PCA came into force in July 1998 for an initial period of ten years. It establishes the institutional framework for [[bilateral relations]], sets the principal common objectives, and calls for activities and dialog in a number of policy areas. Moldova welcomed EU enlargement and signed on [[30 April]] [[2004]] the [[Protocol (treaty)|protocol]] extending the PCA to the new [[EU member states]].
+
Moldova has officially been a [[neutral country]] since its independence, and an early member of the [[NATO]] [[Partnership for Peace]]. The government has stated that Moldova has European aspirations but there has been little progress toward [[European Union|EU]] membership. On May 1, 2004, many EU enthusiasts waving the EU flags found their flags confiscated by police and some were arrested under the clause of "anti-nationalism." A [[Partnership and Cooperation Agreement]] (PCA) with EU is the legal basis for EU relations with Moldova. The PCA came into force in July 1998 for an initial period of ten years. [[Romanian President]] [[Traian Basescu]] is one of the strong advocates (at the EU level) for Moldova's bid to join the European Union. In June 2007 the Republic of Moldova joined the International Parliament for Safety and Peace.
 
 
With the joint adoption of the [[EU-Moldova Action Plan]] on [[February 22]], [[2005]], the EU and Moldova have further reinforced their bilateral relationship, providing a new tool to help implement the PCA and bring Moldova closer to the EU. The [[TACIS]] programme is used as the framework for [[technical assistance]] to support agreed objectives. [[Romanian President]] [[Traian Basescu]] is one of the strong advocates (at the EU level) for Moldova's bid to join the European Union.<ref>[http://english.people.com.cn/200707/03/eng20070703_389584.html Romania seeks German support for Moldova's bid to join EU] People's Daily Online, 3 July 2007.</ref> In June 2007 the Republic of Moldova joined the International Parliament for Safety and Peace (see [http://www.parlamentomondiale.org]and [http://www.international-parliament.net]).
 
 
 
=== Administrative divisions ===
 
[[Image:moldadm.png|thumb|right|200px|Administrative divisions of Moldova]]
 
{{main|Administrative divisions of Moldova}}
 
Moldova is divided into [[Districts of Moldova|thirty-two districts]] (''raioane'', singular ''[[raion]]''); three municipalities ([[Bălţi]], [[Chişinău]], [[Tighina]]); and two autonomous regions ([[Găgăuzia]] and [[Transnistria]]). The cities of [[Comrat]] and [[Tiraspol]] also have municipality status, however not as first-tier subdivisions of Moldova, but as parts of the regions of Găgăuzia and Transnistria, respectively. The districts are:
 
{{columns
 
|col1 =
 
*[[Raionul Anenii Noi|Anenii Noi]]
 
*[[Raionul Basarabeasca|Basarabeasca]]
 
*[[Raionul Briceni|Briceni]]
 
*[[Raionul Cahul|Cahul]]
 
*[[Raionul Cantemir|Cantemir]]
 
*[[Raionul Călăraşi|Călăraşi]]
 
*[[Raionul Căuşeni|Căuşeni]]
 
*[[Raionul Cimişlia|Cimişlia]]
 
*[[Raionul Criuleni|Criuleni]]
 
*[[Raionul Donduşeni|Donduşeni]]
 
*[[Raionul Drochia|Drochia]]
 
|col2width=110px
 
|col2 =
 
*[[Raionul Dubăsari|Dubăsari]]
 
*[[Raionul Edineţ|Edineţ]]
 
*[[Raionul Făleşti|Făleşti]]
 
*[[Raionul Floreşti|Floreşti]]
 
*[[Raionul Glodeni|Glodeni]]
 
*[[Raionul Hînceşti|Hînceşti]]
 
*[[Raionul Ialoveni|Ialoveni]]
 
*[[Raionul Leova|Leova]]
 
*[[Raionul Nisporeni|Nisporeni]]
 
*[[Raionul Ocniţa|Ocniţa]]
 
*[[Raionul Orhei|Orhei]]
 
|col3 =
 
*[[Raionul Rezina|Rezina]]
 
*[[Raionul Rîşcani|Rîşcani]]
 
*[[Raionul Sîngerei|Sîngerei]]
 
*[[Raionul Soroca|Soroca]]
 
*[[Raionul Străşeni|Străşeni]]
 
*[[Raionul Şoldăneşti|Şoldăneşti]]
 
*[[Raionul Ştefan Vodă|Ştefan Vodă]]
 
*[[Raionul Taraclia|Taraclia]]
 
*[[Raionul Teleneşti|Teleneşti]]
 
*[[Raionul Ungheni|Ungheni]]
 
}}
 
 
 
[[Transnistria]] is a ''de jure'' part of Moldova, as its independence is not recognized by any country, although ''[[de facto]]'' it is not controlled by the Moldovan government. It is administered by an unrecognized breakaway authority seeking closer ties with Russia, and its status is still disputed.
 
  
 
===Human rights===
 
===Human rights===
According to Amnesty International's 2007 annual report torture and ill-treatment were widespread and conditions in pre-trial detention were poor. A number of treaties protecting women's rights were ratified, but men, women and children continued to be trafficked for forcible sexual and other exploitation and measures to protect women against domestic violence were inadequate. Constitutional changes to abolish the death penalty were made. Freedom of expression was restricted and opposition politicians were targeted.
+
According to [[Amnesty International]]'s 2007 annual report, [[torture]] and ill-treatment were widespread and conditions in pre-trial detention were poor. A number of treaties protecting women's rights were ratified, but men, women and children continued to be [[Human trafficking|trafficked]] for forcible sexual and other exploitation and measures to protect women against [[domestic violence]] were inadequate. Constitutional changes to abolish the death penalty were made. Freedom of expression was restricted and opposition politicians were targeted.
 
 
The [[United States Senate]] has held committee hearings on irregularities that marred elections in Moldova, including the arrest and harassment of opposition candidates, intimidation and suppression of independent media, and state run media bias in favor of candidates backed by the [[Moldovan Government]].<ref>[http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/cpquery/?&sid=cp108hl6f5&refer=&r_n=sr106.108&db_id=108&item=&sel=TOC_86508& U.S. Library of Congress, Senate report 2004]</ref>
 
 
 
State media coverage of the street protests in 2002 regarding the Communists’ attempt to reinstate obligatory study of the Russian language and to defend the cultural identity that the majority of Moldovans share with neighboring Romania was censored. In February 2002, in response to severe censorship of the state broadcaster Teleradio-Moldova (TVM), hundreds of TVM journalists went on strike in solidarity with the anti-communist opposition. In retribution, a few journalists and staff members were dismissed or suspended from the station in March<ref>[http://www.cpj.org/attacks02/europe02/moldova.html Press freedom report (CPJ)]</ref>.
 
  
However, in 2004 an improvement was made and the Moldovan Parliament removed Article 170 from the country's Criminal Code. Article 170 called for up to five years imprisonment for [[defamation]].<ref>[http://www.ifex.org/alerts/layout/set/print/layout/set/print/content/view/full/58518/ Statement of Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)]</ref>
+
The [[United States Senate]] has held committee hearings on irregularities that marred elections in Moldova, including the arrest and harassment of opposition candidates, intimidation and suppression of independent media, and state run media bias in favor of candidates backed by the [[Moldovan Government]].
 
 
According to the [[OSCE]], the media climate in Moldova remained restrictive as of 2004.<ref>[http://www.osce.org/item/3999.html Report on Assessment Visit to Moldova by the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media]</ref> Authorities continued a long-standing campaign to silence independent opposition voices and movements. In a case widely criticized by [[human rights defender]]s, opposition politician [[Valeriu Pasat]] was sentenced to a ten-year prison term. The United States and human rights defenders from the European Union consider him a political prisoner, and an official statement from Russia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs called the judgment "striking in its cruelty".{{Fact|date=April 2007}}
 
 
 
:''See also: [[Human rights in Transnistria]]''
 
 
 
Moldova has officially been a [[neutral country]] since its independence, and an early member of the [[NATO]] [[Partnership for Peace]]. Moldova currently aspires to join the [[European Union]].  
 
  
 
== Economy ==
 
== Economy ==
[[Image:Moldawischer-Leu-01.jpg|thumb|right|Moldovan leu.]]
+
[[Image:Chisinau Station.jpg|thumb|400px|Chişinău Train Station.]]
{{main|Economy of Moldova}}
+
[[Image:Moldawischer-Leu-01.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Moldovan leu.]]
Moldova enjoys a favorable climate and good farmland but has no major [[mineral]] deposits. As a result, the economy depends heavily on [[agriculture]], featuring fruits, vegetables, [[Moldovan wine]], and [[tobacco]]. Moldova must import all of its supplies of [[petroleum]], [[coal]], and [[natural gas]], largely from [[Russia]]. After the break up of the [[Soviet Union]] in 1991, energy shortages contributed to sharp production declines. As part of an ambitious economic liberalization effort, Moldova introduced a [[convertible currency]], freed all prices, stopped issuing preferential credits to state enterprises, backed steady land [[privatization]], removed export controls, and freed interest rates. The government entered into agreements with the [[World Bank]] and the [[IMF]] to promote growth. Recent trends indicate that the Communist government intends to reverse some of these policies, and recollectivise land while placing more restrictions on private business. The economy returned to positive growth, of 2.1% in 2000 and 6.1% in 2001. Growth remained strong in [[As of 2002|2002]]<!--"As of" used to indicate that new information is needed.—>, in part because of the reforms and because of starting from a small base. Further liberalization is in doubt because of strong political forces backing government controls. The economy remains vulnerable to higher fuel prices, poor agricultural weather, and the skepticism of foreign investors. In agriculture, the economic reform started with the [[Land cadastre in the Republic of Moldova|land cadastre reform]].
+
[[Image:Riesling Cretoaia.JPG|thumb|right|400px|Most of the vineyards in Moldova are located on south facing slopes.]]
  
Following the [[Russian financial crisis|regional financial crisis in 1998]], Moldova has made significant progress towards achieving and retaining macroeconomic and financial stabilization. It has, furthermore, implemented many structural and institutional reforms that are indispensable for the efficient functioning of a market economy. These efforts have helped maintain macroeconomic and financial stability under difficult external circumstances, enabled the resumption of economic growth and contributed to establishing an environment conducive to the economy’s further growth and development in the medium term. Despite these efforts, and despite the recent resumption of economic growth, Moldova still ranks low in terms of commonly-used living standards and human development indicators in comparison with other transition economies. Although the economy experienced a constant economic growth after 2000: with 2.1%, 6.1%, 7,8% and 6,3% between 2000 and 2003 (with a forecast of 8% in 2004), one can observe that these latest developments hardly reach the level of 1994, with almost 40% of the [[Gross domestic product|GDP]] registered in 1990. Thus, during the last decade little has been done to reduce the country’s vulnerability. After a severe economic decline, social and economic challenges, energy uprooted dependencies, Moldova continues to occupy one of the last places among European countries in income per capita.  
+
Moldova remains one of the poorest countries in [[Europe]]. It has a favorable climate and good farmland but has no major [[mineral]] deposits. As a result, the economy depends heavily on [[agriculture]], featuring [[fruit]]s, [[vegetable]]s, [[wine]], and [[tobacco]]. Moldova must import almost all of its energy supplies. Moldova's dependence on [[Russia]]n [[energy]] was underscored at the end of 2005, when a Russian-owned electrical station in Moldova's separatist Transnistria region cut off [[electrical power|power]] to Moldova and Russia's Gazprom cut off [[natural gas]] to Moldova in disputes over pricing.  
  
In 2002 (Human Development Report 2004), the registered GDP per capita was US $381, equivalent to US $ 1,470 [[Purchasing power parity|PPP]], which is 5.3 times lower than the world average (US $ 7,804). Moreover, GDP per capita is under the average of all regions in the world, including Sub-Saharan Africa (US $ 1,790 PPP). In 2004, about 40% of the population were under the absolute poverty line and registered an income lower than US $ 2.15 (PPP) per day. Moldova is classified as medium in human development and is at the 113th spot in the list of 177 countries. The value of the Human Development Index (0.681) is below the world average. Moldova remains the poorest country in Europe in terms of GDP per capita: $ 2,500 in 2006.<ref>[https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/md.html CIA - The World Factbook - Moldova] 6 Sep 2007</ref>
+
Economic reforms have been slow because of corruption and strong political forces backing government controls; nevertheless, the government's primary goal of EU integration has resulted in some market-oriented progress. The economy remains vulnerable to higher fuel prices, poor agricultural weather, and the skepticism of [[foreign investment|foreign investors]]. Also, the presence of an illegal separatist regime in Moldova's Transnistria region continues to be a drag on the Moldovan economy.  
  
===Information technology and telecommunications===
+
Export commodities include foodstuffs, [[textile]]s, and machinery. Export partners include [[Russia]], [[Germany]], [[Italy]], [[Romania]], [[Ukraine]], and [[Belarus]].  
In 2004, the volume of investment in the [[telecommunications]] and information market in Moldova increased by 30.1% in comparison with 2003, achieving 825.3 million [[Moldovan leu|lei]] (65.5 million US dollars). The representatives of the [[National Agency for Telecommunications and Information Regulation]] stated that 451 million lei (35.9 million dollars) were invested in the field of fixed telephone communication. [[Investments]] constituted 330 million lei (26.2 million dollars) in the field of [[mobile telephony]], 24.2 million lei (1.9 million dollars) in the field of [[Internet service]]s, 19.1 million lei (1.5 million dollars) in the field of cable television services. An essential increase of 163 million lei (12.9 million dollars) has been achieved in the field of mobile telephony. In comparison with 2003, investments in this sector practically doubled. An insignificant increase was registered in the other [[market segment]]s, but the investment volume remained the same in the field of [[fixed telephony|fixed telephone]] communication.  
 
  
In 2005, investments in telecommunication and information technology exceeded the level of the previous year, due to the investments by the national operator of the stationary telephone communications in the [[Joint-Stock Company]] [[Moldtelecom]] for the implementation of [[Code Division Multiple Access|CDMA]] technology, the investments of the operators of mobile telephony [[Orange Moldova|Orange]] and [[Moldcell]] in the development of [[infrastructure]], and the extension and improvement of Internet access services via new [[broadband|broadband technologies]].
+
Import commodities include mineral products and [[fuel]], [[machinery]] and equipment, chemicals, and [[textile]]s. Import partner include Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Germany, Italy, and [[Poland]].
  
 
== Demographics ==
 
== Demographics ==
{{main|Demographics of Moldova}}
+
Traditionally a rural country, Moldova gradually began changing its character under Soviet rule. As urban areas became the sites of new industrial jobs and of amenities such as clinics, the population of cities and towns grew. The new residents were not only ethnic Moldovans who had moved from rural areas but also many ethnic Russians and Ukrainians who had been recruited to fill positions in industry and government. Although Moldova is by far the most densely populated of the former Soviet republics, it has few large cities.
===Population===
 
  
 
===Ethnicity===
 
===Ethnicity===
[[Image:Moldova ethnic coposition.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Ethnic composition in 1989.]]
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One of Moldova's characteristic traits is its ethnic diversity. The definition of ethnic groups is the subject of an ongoing dispute. The main controversy concerns the identity between ''Moldovans'' and ''Romanians,'' as well as between the corresponding Moldovan and Romanian languages. The distinction between Moldovans and Romanians has been a greatly disputed political issue with one side arguing that Moldovans constitute an ethnic group separate from the Romanian [[ethnos]], whereas others claim that Moldovans in both Romania and Moldova are simply a subgroup of the Romanian ethnos, similar to [[Transylvania]]ns, [[Oltenia]]ns, and other groups.
Given that the definition of ethnic groups is the subject of an ongoing dispute, the following data must be treated with caution. The main controversy, concerns the identity between ''[[Moldovans]]'' and ''[[Romanians]]'', as well as between the corresponding Moldovan and Romanian languages (see [[Moldovan language]]). The distinction between Moldovans and Romanians has been a greatly disputed political issue with one side arguing that Moldovans constitute an ethnic group separate from the Romanian [[ethnos]], whereas others claim that Moldovans in both Romania and Moldova are simply a subgroup of the Romanian ethnos, similar to [[Transylvania]]ns, [[Oltenia]]ns, and other groups (''see [[Moldovans]]'').
 
  
The last reference data is that of the [[2004 Moldovan Census]]<ref>{{ro icon}} [http://www.statistica.md/recensamint.php?lang=ro Official results of 2004 Moldovan census]</ref> and the [[2004 Census in Transnistria]]:
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===Religion===
 +
[[Image:Moldavian orthodox church.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Moldavian Orthodox church]]
 +
[[Image:Manastirea Hancu outside shot1.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Hâncu monastery.]]
 +
[[Image:Manastirea Hancu ceiling.jpg|thumb|right|400px|The ceiling (cupola) of Hancu monastery, founded in 1678.]]
 +
The majority of Moldovans are Christian, almost all [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Eastern Orthodox]]. Orthodox Christians were not required in the census to declare the particular church they belong to. The [[Moldovan Orthodox Church]], subordinated to the [[Russian Orthodox Church]], and the [[Orthodox Church of Bessarabia]], autonomous and subordinated to the [[Romanian Orthodox Church]], both claim to be the national church of the country.
  
{| class="wikitable"
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The Soviet government strictly limited the activities of the [[Orthodox Church]] (and all religions) and at times sought to exploit it, with the ultimate goal of destroying it and all religious activity. Most Orthodox churches and [[monastery|monasteries]] in Moldova were demolished or converted to other uses, such as warehouses, and clergy were sometimes punished for leading services. But many believers continued to practice their faith in secret.
|- style="background:#efefef;"
 
! #  !!  Ethnicity    !! Mold. census !! % Mold !! Transnistrian census !! % Tran !!  Total  !!  %
 
|-
 
| 1. || [[Moldovans]]*  ||  2,564,849  ||  75.8% ||        177,156      ||  31.9% || 2,742,005 || 69.6%
 
|-
 
| 2. || [[Ukrainians]] ||    282,406  ||  8.3% ||        159,940      ||  28.8% ||  442,346 || 11.2%
 
|-
 
| 3. || [[Russians]]   ||    201,218  ||  5.9% ||        168,270      ||  30.3% ||  369,488 ||  9.4%
 
|-
 
| 4. || [[Gagauz people|Gagauzians]] ||    147,500  ||  4.4% ||        11,107      ||  2.0% ||  158,607 ||  4.0%
 
|-
 
| 5. || [[Romanians]]*  ||    73,276  ||  2.2% ||        NA          ||  NA  ||    73,276 ||  1.9%
 
|-
 
| 6. || [[Bulgarians]] ||    65,662  ||  1.9% ||        11,107      ||  2.0% ||    76,769 ||  1.9%
 
|-
 
| 7. || Others        ||    48,421  ||  1.4% ||        27,767      ||  5.0% ||    76,188 ||  1.9%
 
|-
 
| 8. || '''TOTAL'''          ||  '''3,383,332'''  ||  '''100%''' ||        '''555,347'''      ||  '''100%''' || '''3,938,679''' ||  '''100%'''
 
|}
 
  
Note: Transnistrian authorities published only the percentage of ethnic groups; the number of people was calculated from those percentages. The number or percentage of Romanians in Transnistria was not published; it is included in "others".
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In 1991 Moldova had 853 Orthodox churches and eleven Orthodox monasteries (four for monks and seven for nuns). In addition, the Old [[Russian Orthodox Church]] had 14 churches and one monastery in Moldova.
  
According to the ''[[Moldova Azi]]'' news agency,<ref>[http://azi.md/news?ID=34282 Experts Offering to Consult the National Statistics Bureau in Evaluation of the Census Data], ''Moldova Azi'', May 19, 2005, story attributed to [[AP Flux]]. Retrieved October 11, 2005.</ref> a group of international census experts described the 2004 Moldovan census as "generally conducted in a professional manner", while remarking that that "a few topics… were potentially more problematic", in particular:
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There is no state religion, although the [[Moldovan Orthodox Church]] receives some favored treatment from the current government. The [[constitution]] provides for [[freedom of religion]], and the government generally respects this right in practice; however, the 1992 Law on Religions, which codifies religious freedoms, contains restrictions that inhibit the activities of unregistered religious groups.
# The census includes at least some Moldovans who had been living abroad over one year at the time of the census.
 
# * The precision of numbers about nationality/ethnicity and language was questioned. Some enumerators apparently encouraged respondents to declare that they were "''[[Moldovan]]''" rather than "''[[Romanian]]''", and even within a single family there may have been confusion about these terms. Also it is unclear how many respondents consider the term "Moldovan" to signify an ethnic identity other than "Romanian".
 
  
===Religions===
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Before the [[Holocaust]], the country had a substantial [[Jew|Jewish]] community, seven percent, or slightly over 200,000, in 1930. In June-July 1941 approximately two thirds of the Jews fled (mostly in miserable conditions) to the interior of the USSR ([[Uzbekistan]], [[Siberia]], other regions) before the retreat of the Soviet troops. In 1941-1942, approximately one third of the Bessarabian Jews (alongside Jews from several other districts of Romania) were deported to [[ghetto]]s and [[labor camp]]s in [[Transnistria (WWII)]], where more than half perished in extreme conditions. Approximately 10,000 Jews (both military and civilians) were executed during the military action in June-July 1941 by German [[Einsatzkommando]] D, and (at least on four occasions) by Romanian troops. By mid 1942 fewer than 20,000 Jews remained in the region. After the Soviets took back the region in 1944, most of the Bessarabian Jews returned. During the Soviet period some Jews from Moldova moved to other parts of the former [[USSR]], while some Jews from other regions moved to Moldova. During late 1980s and 1990s, there was [[mass migration]] of Jews to [[Israel]], with a total number of emigrants estimated at over 100,000. Only a very small Jewish population remains in Moldova.
According to the 2004 census, the population of Moldova has the following religious composition:
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right;"
 
! Religion !! Adherents !! % of total</tr>
 
|align="left"| [[Eastern Orthodoxy|Eastern Orthodox Christians]] || 3,158,015 || 95.5%</tr>
 
|-
 
|align="left"|
 
Newer [[Protestantism#Later development|Protestant]] faiths
 
: [[Baptist]]s
 
: [[Seventh-day Adventist Church|Seventh-day Adventists]]
 
: [[Pentecostalism|Pentecostal]]
 
: [[Plymouth Brethren|Brethren Assemblies]]&nbsp;{{smallsup|a}}
 
|
 
<br/><small>
 
32,754{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
13,503{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
9,179{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
5,075{{spaces|4}}</small>
 
|
 
1.83%<br/><small>
 
0.99%{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
0.41%{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
0.28%{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
0.15%{{spaces|4}}</small>
 
|-
 
|align="left"|
 
Traditional [[Protestantism|Protestant]]
 
: Confessional Evangelicals
 
: [[Reformed Church|Refomed]]
 
: Evangelical Synod-Presbyterians
 
|
 
<br/><small>
 
1,429{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
1,190{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
3,596{{spaces|4}}</small>
 
|
 
0.19%<br/><small>
 
0.04%{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
0.04%{{spaces|4}}<br/>
 
0.11%{{spaces|4}}</small>
 
|-
 
|align="left"| Old-Rite Christians&nbsp;{{smallsup|b}}  || 5,094 || 0.15%</tr>
 
|align="left"| [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholics]] || 4,645 || 0.14%</tr>
 
|align="left"| [[Muslim]]s    ||  1,667 || 0.05%</tr>
 
|align="left"| Other religions || 25,527 || 0.77%</tr>
 
|colspan="3"| </tr>
 
|align="left"| [[Agnostic]]s  || 33,207 || 1%</tr>
 
|align="left"| [[Atheist]]s    || 12,724 || 0.38%</tr>
 
|}
 
<small>Percentages are calculated from the number of people declaring a religion; 75,727 (2.29%) of the population did not declare a religion.<br/><sup>a</sup> Known as ''Creştini după Evanghelie''.<br/><sup>b</sup> Traditionally Orthodox [[Lipovan]]s.</small>
 
 
 
Orthodox Christians were not required in the census to declare the particular church they belong to. The [[Moldovan Orthodox Church]], subordinated to the [[Russian Orthodox Church]], and the [[Orthodox Church of Bessarabia]], autonomous and subordinated to the [[Romanian Orthodox Church]], both claim to be the national church of the country.
 
 
 
Before the Holocaust, the country had a substantial [[Bessarabian Jews|Jewish]] community, 7%, or slightly over 200,000, in 1930. In June-July 1941 approximately two thirds of the Jews fled (mostly in miserable conditions) to the interior of the USSR (Uzbekistan, Siberia, other regions) before the retreat of the Soviet troops. In 1941-1942, approximately one third of the [[Bessarabian Jews]] (alongside Jews from several other districts of Romania) were deported to ghettos and labor camps in [[Transnistria (WWII)]], where more than half perished in extreme conditions. Approximately 10,000 Jews (both military and civilians) were executed during the military action in June-July 1941 by German [[Einsatzkommando]] D, and (at least on four occasions) by Romanian troops. By mid 1942 fewer than 20,000 Jews remained in the region. After the Soviets took back the region in 1944, most of the Bessarabian Jews returned. During the Soviet period some Jews from Moldova moved to other parts of the former [[USSR]], while some Jews from other regions moved to Moldova. During late 1980s and 1990s, there was mass migration of Jews to Israel, with a total number of emigrants estimated at over 100,000. The Jewish population was estimated at 1.5% as late as 2000.
 
  
 
===Language===
 
===Language===
{{main|Moldovan language|Romanian language}}
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[[Image:Romania Graiuri.jpg|thumb|400px|right|Major varieties of the [[Romanian language|Romanian]] language.]]
The state language, according to Title I, Article 13 of the Moldovan Constitution, is [[Moldovan language|Moldovan]]. In Moldova's Declaration of Independence, the same language is called [[Romanian language|Romanian]]<ref>{{ro-icon}}[http://www.moldova-suverana.md/index.php?start_from=&ucat=7&subaction=showfull&id=1156426235&archive=1156767681& Declaraţia de independenţa a Republicii Moldova], [[Moldova Suverană]]</ref>. There is no particular linguistic break at the [[Prut River]], which divides Moldova from Romania. In formal use, the languages are identical except for minor [[orthography|orthographical]] issues (the Moldovans often, but not always, write ''î'' in some contexts where Romanians would use ''â''; this same form used to be normal in Romania until 1993). There is, however, some regional variation, as might be found within any linguistic territory, and the common speech of areas such as [[Chişinău]] or [[Transnistria]] can be distinguished from the speech of [[Iaşi]], a Romanian city that is also part of the former [[Principality of Moldavia]], while the difference in the common speech between [[Iaşi]] and the capital of Romania [[Bucharest]] is even greater. Linguistically, Moldovan is considered one the the five major spoken dialects of Romanian, all five being written identically. In general, before 1988-89, the less educated, the greater the difference from standard Romanian, and the more words were borrowed ad hoc from Russian into the daily speech.<!--In general, the larger the [[Slavic languages|Slavic]]-speaking population of a region is, the greater the difference from standard Romanian.{{dubious}} This is highly dubious: the more Slavic speaking population, the better locals knew Russian, the less Russian words entered Romanian. On the contrary, the less Slavic speaking population, the less Russian they knew, hence instead of learning a new language, they only borrowed a few words: they did not know sufficiently many Russian words to speak clean Russian, yet they knew sufficiantly many to introduce them into their own langiage. Just compare cities vs countryside. By 1989, locals in the cities spoke more clean Romanian than those in the countryside, b/c those in the cities leanred Russian as a second language, while those in the countryside only learned a few hundred words, insuficiant to have an intelligent discussion and express freely in Russian.—>
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The state language, according to Title I, Article 13 of the Moldovan Constitution, is [[Moldovan language|Moldovan]]. In Moldova's Declaration of Independence, the same language is called [[Romanian language|Romanian]]. There is no particular linguistic break at the [[Prut River]], which divides Moldova from Romania. Linguistically, Moldovan is considered one of the five major spoken dialects of Romanian, all five being written identically. In formal use, the languages are identical except for minor [[orthography|orthographical]] issues. There is, however, some regional variation, as might be found within any linguistic territory, and the common speech of areas such as [[Chişinău]] or [[Transnistria]] can be distinguished from the speech of [[Iaşi]], a Romanian city that is also part of the former [[Principality of Moldavia]], while the difference in the common speech between Iaşi and the capital of Romania [[Bucharest]] is even greater. In general, before 1988-1989, the less educated, the greater the difference from standard Romanian, and the more words were borrowed ad hoc from Russian into the daily speech. A significant minority speaks [[Russian language|Russian]], and there are more [[Slavic languages|Slavicisms]] in common speech in Moldova than in common speech in Romania.  
  
Opinions vary on the status of Moldovan as a language. Most linguists consider [[standard language|standard]] Moldovan to be identical to standard Romanian, an [[Eastern Romance languages|Eastern Romance language]], although one Moldovan linguist<ref>Stati, V.N. ''Dicţionar moldovenesc-românesc''. [=''Moldovan-Romanian dictionary''.] Chişinău: Tipografia Centrală (Biblioteca Pro Moldova), 2003. ISBN 9975-78-248-5.</ref> disputes this. There are, however, more differences between the colloquial spoken languages of Moldova and [[Romania]], most significantly due to the influence of [[Russian language|Russian]] in Moldova which was not present in Romania. These differences in speech vocabulary are being slowly diluted after 1989. The matter of whether or not Moldovan is a separate language is a contested political issue within and beyond the Republic of Moldova. The 1989 law on language of the [[Moldavian SSR]], which is still effective in Moldova according to the Constitution <ref>[http://www.parlament.md/law/constitution/t7/ Constitution of the Republic of Moldova, Title 7, Article 7]: ''"The law of 1 September 1989 regarding the usage of languages spoken on the territory of the Republic of Moldova remains valid, excepting the points where it contradicts this constitution."'' </ref>, asserts the existence of "linguistic Moldo-[[Romanian language|Romanian]] identity". <ref name="lang law"/>
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In some cases [[Russian language|Russian]] is used alongside Moldovan (Romanian) within state institutions, despite not having legal status. This is generally in direct relation to the political context in the government, which can be either pro-Russian or pro-Romanian/pro-Western. In [[Transnistria]], the breakaway authorities consider its old Cyrillic form co-official with Russian and [[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]], and persecute inhabitants who use the standard Latin alphabet.
A significant minority speaks native [[Russian language|Russian]], and there are more [[Slavic languages|Slavicisms]] in common speech in Moldova than in common speech in Romania. Nonetheless, Moldovans are generally aware when they are using a word of Slavic origin not found in common Romanian, and are capable of choosing whether or not to use these words in a particular context.
 
  
In some cases [[Russian language|Russian]] is used alongside Moldovan (Romanian) within state institutions, despite not having legal status. This is generally in direct relation to the political context in the government, which can be either pro-Russian or pro-Romanian/pro-Western. As of 2006, five members of the Moldovan government were not able to speak Moldovan, the main language used in government meetings being Russian<ref>[http://azi.md/news?ID=41925 Moldovan MPs say state functionaries that do not speak state language should be dismissed]</ref>. In [[Transnistria]], the breakaway authorities consider its old Cyrillic form co-official with [[Russian language|Russian]] and [[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]], and persecute inhabitants that use the standard Latin alphabet.
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===Marriage and the family===
 +
When a young couple decides to marry, the girl often will go and stay at her future husband's home. Her parents are informed the next day, and the families meet to agree on the [[marriage]], which may take place a couple of months later. Newlyweds live together with the groom's parents until they can get their own home. In the villages, the youngest son and his family live with the parents, and he inherits the house and contents. Otherwise, children inherit equally from their parents. Godparents are responsible for their godchildren through marriage and building a house.
  
===Men and women===
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===Education===
 +
Bessarabia was one of the least-developed, and least-educated European regions of the Russian Empire. In 1930, its literacy rate was only 40 percent, according to a Romanian [[census]]. Although Soviet authorities promoted [[education]] in order to spread [[Communism|communist ideology]], they also did everything they could to break the region's cultural ties with [[Romania]].
  
===Marriage and the family===
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The Soviet regime eradicated [[illiteracy]] and emphasized [[technical education]] to produce specialists and a highly skilled workforce for agriculture and industry. Before 1940 the republic had only one tertiary institute, a teacher-training college. By 2005, there were 16 state and 14 private institutions of [[higher education]], with a total of 126,100 [[student]]s, including 104,300 in the state, and 21,700 in the private ones.
  
===Education===
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The Moldova Academy of Sciences, established in Chisinau in 1961, coordinates the activities of some 16 scientific institutions. There are at least 50 centers researching [[viticulture]], [[horticulture]], [[beet]] growing, [[grain]] cultivation, and [[wine]] making.
  
 
===Class===
 
===Class===
Large landowners (boyars) disappeared after the Soviet regime was established. After the Soviet Union collapsed, there emerged a wealthy class composed of of former Soviet high-ranking officials, who appropriated state funds, and young entrepreneurs who amassed wealth on the introduction of a market economy. Moldovans tend to have higher positions in the government, while Russians dominate the private sector. New ornamented houses and villas, cars, cellphones, and fashionable clothes symbolize wealth. Consumer goods brought from abroad (Turkey, Romania, Germany) function as status symbols in cities and rural areas.
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Large landowners ''(boyars)'' disappeared after the Soviet regime was established. After the Soviet Union collapsed, there emerged a wealthy class composed of former Soviet high-ranking officials, who appropriated state funds, and young [[entrepreneur]]s who amassed wealth on the introduction of a [[market economy]]. Moldovans tend to have higher positions in the government, while Russians dominate the private sector. New ornamented houses and villas, cars, cellphones, and fashionable clothes symbolize wealth. Consumer goods brought from abroad (Turkey, Romania, Germany) function as status symbols in cities and rural areas.
 
 
  
 
== Culture ==
 
== Culture ==
[[Image:Eminescu.jpg|thumb|[[Mihai Eminescu]], [[national poet]] of Moldova and [[Romania]].]]
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[[Image:Chisinau Center.jpg|thumb|400px|right|Triumphal Arch and Orthodox Cathedral, central Chişinău.]]
{{main|Culture of Moldova}}
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[[Image:Căpriana monastery.jpg|right|thumb|right|400px|Căpriana monastery.]]
Located geographically at the crossroads of Latin and Slavic cultures, Moldova has enriched its own culture adopting and maintaining some of the traditions of its neighbors.
+
The [[culture]] of Moldova has been influenced by its [[Romania]]n origin, the roots of which reach back to the second century C.E., the period of [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] colonization in [[Dacia]]. During the Soviet era, the state directed cultural and intellectual life, meaning the theatre, motion pictures, television, and printed matter were [[censorship|censored]] and closely scrutinized.  
 
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The Prince [[Dimitrie Cantemir]] is one of the most important figures of [[Moldavian]] culture of the 18th century. Cantemir wrote the first geographical, ethnographical and economic description of the country in [[Descriptio Moldaviae]] ([[Berlin]], 1714).
 
 
 
 
===Architecture===
 
===Architecture===
 +
Chişinău's city center, built in the nineteenth century by the Russians, features a neoclassical style of [[architecture]]. While there are numerous small one-story houses in the center, the outskirts are dominated by Soviet-style residential buildings. Small towns combine Soviet-style administration buildings and apartment blocks with typical Moldovan, Ukrainian, Gagauz, Bulgarian, or German houses, depending on their original inhabitants. Each house has a [[garden]], a [[vineyard]], and are surrounded by low metal ornamented bars.
  
 
===Art===
 
===Art===
 +
Sixteenth-century [[icon]]s are the oldest examples of Moldovan graphic arts. Early twentieth century sculptor Alexandru Plămădeală and architect A. Şciusev contributed to the heritage of Bessarabian arts. Nineteenth and twentieth century Bessarabian painters worked on [[landscape painting]]s as well as [[Soviet realism]]. Since independence, artists including Valeriu Jabinski, Iuri Matei, Andrei Negur, and Gennadi Teciuc have appeared. Folk traditions, including [[ceramics (art)|ceramics]] and [[weaving]], continue to be practiced in rural areas.
  
===Cinema===
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===Cuisine and wine===
 +
[[Image:Mamaliga_right.jpg|thumb|400px|right|Mămăligă]]
 +
The national dish is ''mamaliga,'' a hard corn porridge. It is poured onto a flat surface in the shape of a cake and is served with [[cheese]], sour cream, or [[milk]]. Historically a [[peasant food]], it was often used as a substitute for bread or even as a [[staple food]] in the poor rural areas. However, in the last decades it has emerged as an upscale dish available in the finest restaurants. Other main foods are a mixture of vegetables and meat (chicken, goose, duck, pork, and lamb), filled [[cabbage]] and grape leaves, and ''zama'' and Russian ''borsch'' soups. ''Plăcintă'' is a [[pastry]] filled with [[cheese]], [[potato]]es, or [[cabbage]].
  
===Clothing===
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Moldova has a well established [[wine]] industry. The imprints of ''Vitis teutonica'' vine leaves near the Naslavcia village in the north of Moldova, prove that grapes have grown there approximately six to 25 million years ago. The size of the grape seed imprints found near the Varvarovca village and which date to 2800 B.C.E., prove that at that time the grapes were already cultivated. It has a vineyard area of 147,000 hectares (ha), of which 102,500 ha are in commercial production. Most of the country's wine production is for [[export]]. Many families have their own recipes and strands of [[grape]]s that have been passed on through generations.
  
===Cuisine===
+
===Literature===
 +
[[Image:Hasdeu poza semnatura.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Bogdan P. Hasdeu: photograph and signature]]
 +
[[Image:Eminescu.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Mihai Eminescu]], national poet of Moldova and Romania.]]
 +
Oral [[literature]] and folklore prevailed until the nineteenth century. The first Moldovan books (religious texts) appeared in the mid-seventeenth century. Prince [[Dimitrie Cantemir]] (1673-1723), one of the most important figures of Moldavian culture of the eighteenth century, wrote the first geographical, ethnographical and economic description of the country in ''Descriptio Moldaviae'' (Berlin, 1714).
  
 +
Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu (1838—1907) was a [[Romania]]n writer and philologist, who pioneered many branches of Romanian [[philology]] and history. Hasdeu is considered to have been able to understand 26 languages (many of which he could converse in).
  
===Literature===
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[[Mihai Eminescu]] (1850-89) was probably the best-known and most influential [[Romanian language]] late [[Romanticism|romantic]] poet.
[[Mihai Eminescu]] was a late [[Romanticism|romantic]] poet, probably the best-known and most influential [[Romanian language]] poet.
+
 
 +
Other prominent figures include author [[Ion Creanga|Ion Creangă]] (1837-1889), [[Vladimir Besleaga|Vladimir Besleagă]], [[Pavel Botu|Pavel Boţu]], [[Aureliu Busuioc]], [[Nicolae Dabija]], [[Ion Druta|Ion Druţă]], Victor Teleuca and [[Grigore Vieru]]. In 1991, a total of 520 books were published in Moldova, of which 402 were in Romanian, 108 in Russian, eight in [[Gagauz]], and two in [[Bulgarian language|Bulgarian]].
  
 
===Music===
 
===Music===
 +
Moldovan music is closely related to that of Romania. Moldovan folk is known for swift, complex rhythms (a characteristic shared with many [[Eastern Europe]]an traditions), [[musical improvisation]], [[syncopation]] and much [[melody|melodic]] [[ornament (music)|ornamentation]]
  
===Sport===
+
During the Soviet era, Moldovan folk culture flourished, and was strongly promoted by the government. However, many elements were altered to obscure the shared history of Romania and Moldova, because the Soviet Union wanted to discourage secessionism. The [[Mioriţa]] is ancient [[ballad]] that is an important part of Moldovan folk culture.
  
[[Football (soccer)|Football]] has traditionally been Moldova's national sport, however, [[rugby union]] has risen to become a very popular sport with the [[Moldova national rugby union team|national team]] earning promotion to Division one of the [[European Nations Cup]] with some brilliant displays attracting many spectators to their matches.
+
===Theatre===
 +
In the early 1990s, Moldova had 12 professional theaters. All performed in Romanian, except the A.P. Chekhov Russian Drama Theater in [[Chişinău]], and the Russian Drama and Comedy Theater in [[Tiraspol]], both of which performed solely in Russian, and the Licurici Republic Puppet Theater (in Chişinău), which performed in both Romanian and Russian. Although, among those controlled tendencies by Soviets, real artists in music formed real art-bands, such as "Ciocîrlia" led by Serghei Lunchevici ([[Loonkevich]]),and "Lăutarii" of Nicolae Botgros. Members of ethnic minorities manage a number of folklore groups and amateur theaters throughout the country.
  
{{seealso|List of Moldovans|Music of Moldova|Religion in Moldova}}
+
===Sport===
 +
[[Football|(Soccer]]) has traditionally been Moldova's national sport, however, [[rugby union]] has risen to become a popular sport with the [[Moldova national rugby union team|national team]] earning promotion to Division one of the [[European Nations Cup]] with some brilliant displays attracting many spectators to their matches.
  
==See also==
+
==Notes==
{{Moldovan Topics}}
+
<references/>
{{portal|Moldova|Flag of Moldova.svg}}
 
{{columns |width=220px
 
|col1 =
 
* [[Principality of Moldavia]]
 
* [[Moldova (Romanian region)|Moldova]], an adjacent Romanian region of the same name.
 
* [[Coat of arms of Moldova]]
 
* [[Foreign relations of Moldova]]
 
* [[Military of Moldova]]
 
|col2 =
 
* [[Internal security in Moldova]]
 
* [[Crime in Moldova]]
 
* [[Communications in Moldova]]
 
* [[Transportation in Moldova]]
 
* [[Education in Moldova]]
 
|col3 =
 
* [[Health services in Moldova]]
 
* [[Exports of Moldova]]
 
* [[Imports of Moldova]]
 
* [[Agriculture of Moldova]]
 
* [[Moldovan wine]]
 
}}
 
  
== Gallery ==
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==References==
<gallery>
+
* Aklaev, Airat R., "Dynamics of the Moldova-Trans-Dniestr-Conflict (late 1980s to early 1990s)." In Kumar Rupesinghe and Valeriĭ Aleksandrovich Tishkov, eds. ''Ethnicity and power in the contemporary world.'' Tokyo: United Nations University Press, 1996. ISBN 9789280809084
Image:Stefan Chisinau.jpg|Monument to Stephen the Great of Moldova
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* Bremmer, Ian, and Ray Taras (eds.). ''New States, New Politics: Building the Post-Soviet Nations.'' Cambridge, UK:Cambridge University Press, 1996. ISBN 9780521577991
Image:Chisinau Center.jpg|[[Triumphal Arch]], [[Chişinău]]
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* Bruchis, Michael. ''One step back, two steps forward: on the language policy of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in the national republics: Moldavian, a look back, a survey, and perspectives, 1924-1980.'' East European monographs, no. 109. Boulder: East European Monographs, 1982. ISBN 9780880330022
Image:Moldavian orthodox church.jpg|Moldavian [[Orthodox church]]
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* Bruchis, Michael. ''The Republic of Moldavia: from the collapse of the Soviet empire to the restoration of the Russian empire.'' East European monographs, no. 476. Boulder: East European Monographs, 1996. ISBN 9780880333733
</gallery>
+
* Chinn, Jeff. "The Case of Transdniestr." In Lena Jonson and Clive Archer. ''Peacekeeping and the role of Russia in Eurasia.'' Boulder: Westview Press, 1996. ISBN 9780813389585
 
+
* Eyal, Jonathan. "Moldavians." In Graham Smith, ed. ''The Nationalities question in the Soviet Union.'' London: Longman, 1990. ISBN 9780582039551
== Notes ==
+
* King, Charles. ''The Moldovans: Romania, Russia, and the Politics of Culture.'' Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0817997922
<div class="references-small"><references /></div>
 
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
{{sisterlinks|Moldova}}
+
All links retrieved November 9, 2022.
*[http://e-gov.moldova.md/moldova(en).nsf Official governmental site]
+
*[https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/moldova/ Moldova] CIA ''World FactBook''.
*[http://www.parlament.md/en.html Official web site of the Parliament]
+
*[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9110566/Moldova Moldova] Encyclopaedia Britannica.
*[http://ec.europa.eu/comm/external_relations/moldova/intro/ The EU's relations with Moldova (European Commission site)]
+
*[http://www.everyculture.com/Ma-Ni/Moldova.html Moldova] Countries and Their Cultures.
*[http://www.mfa.md/ The Ministry of Foreign Affairs]
+
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/country_profiles/3038982.stm Moldova country profile] ''BBC''.
*[http://embassyrm.org/ Embassy of the Republic of Moldova in the United States of America]
+
* [https://www.rferl.org/a/1055188.html Moldova: Young Women From Rural Areas Vulnerable To Human Trafficking] ''Radio Free Europe''.
*[http://moldova.usembassy.gov/ Embassy of the United States of America in the Republic of Moldova]
 
*[http://www.elections2005.md/ Elections in Moldova 2005]
 
*[http://www.alegeri.md/en/2007/ General Local Elections 2007]
 
*[http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2005/61664.htm U.S. Department of State 2005 report about Human Rights in Moldova]
 
 
 
===Profiles===
 
* [http://foia.state.gov/MMS/postrpt/pr_view_all.asp?CntryID=100 U.S. Department of State Post Reports - Moldova]
 
* [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/md.html CIA - The World Factbook - Moldova]
 
* [http://www.ecmimoldova.org ECMI - Information about Minority Issues in Moldova]
 
*[http://arteforte.net/ '''Moldova ART Gallery''' by Anastasia Ponyatovskaya: icons, oil paintings, batik.All items are for sale,delivering is avalable]
 
{{wikinews|Portal:Moldova|Moldova news portal}}
 
 
 
===Others===
 
*[http://www.bisnis.doc.gov/bisnis/bisdoc/0602MDInvestmClimate.htm MOLDOVA 2006 INVESTMENT CLIMATE STATEMENT]
 
* [http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2004/10/c28fad55-44c3-4fcc-b3dc-73e93e4d8119.html Moldova: Young Women From Rural Areas Vulnerable To Human Trafficking]
 
*[http://www.ournet.md OurNet — Moldova Internet Resources]
 
 
 
===International rankings===
 
* [[Bertelsmann]]: [http://www.bertelsmann-transformation-index.de/37.0.html?&L=1 Bertelsmann Transformation Index 2006], ranked 75th out of 119 countries
 
* [[Reporters without borders]]: [http://www.rsf.org/rubrique.php3?id_rubrique=554 Annual worldwide press freedom index (2005)], ranked 74th out of 167 countries
 
* [[The Wall Street Journal]]: [http://www.heritage.org/research/features/index/ 2005] [[Index of Economic Freedom]], ranked 77th out of 155 countries
 
* [[The Economist]]: [http://www.economist.com/theworldin/international/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3372495&d=2005 The World in 2005 - Worldwide quality-of-life index, 2005], ranked 99th out of 111 countries
 
* [[Transparency International]]: [http://ww1.transparency.org/cpi/2005/cpi2005_infocus.html Corruption Perceptions Index 2005], ranked 88th out of 158 countries
 
* [[United Nations Development Programme]]: [http://hdr.undp.org/reports/global/2005/ Human Development Index 2005], ranked 116th out of 177 countries
 
* [[World Economic Forum]]: [http://www.weforum.org/site/homepublic.nsf/Content/Growth+Competitiveness+Index+rankings+2005+and+2004+comparisons Global Competitiveness Report 2005-2006 - Growth Competitiveness Index Ranking], ranked 82nd out of 117 countries
 
* [[World Bank]]: [http://www.doingbusiness.org/ExploreEconomies/Default.aspx?economyid=129 Doing Business 2006], ranked 83rd out of 155
 
* [[World Bank]]: [http://www.doingbusiness.org/ExploreEconomies/Default.aspx?economyid=129 Ease of Starting a Business 2006], ranked 69th out of 155
 
* [[United Nations|United Nations Conference on Trade and Development]]: [http://www.unctad.org/sections/dite_dir/docs/wir05_fs_ro_en.pdf Foreign Direct Investment Performance Index 2004], ranked 35th out of 140
 
{{Template group
 
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{{Countries of Europe}}
 
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{{credit|Moldova|159703456|Geography_of_Moldova|158897173|History_of_Moldova|143198697|Bessarabia|159366965|Transnistria|159285573|Politics_of_Moldova|155248290|Human_rights_in_Transnistria|144585896|Romanian-Moldovan_relations|160035716|Military_of_Moldova|145420054|Economy_of_Moldova|157495680|Demographics_of_Moldova|156454487|Culture_of_Moldova|146778894|Moldovan_wine|158933764|Music_of_Moldova|155629148}}
  
 
[[Category:Geography]]
 
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[[Category:Countries]]
 
[[Category:Europe]]
 
[[Category:Europe]]

Latest revision as of 19:49, 9 November 2022

Republica Moldova
Republic of Moldova
Flag of Moldova Coat of arms of Moldova
AnthemLimba Noastră 
Our Language
Location of Moldova
Location of  Moldova (orange)
on the European continent (white)
Capital
(and largest city)
Flagge-Chisinau-01-10.png Chişinău
47°0′N 28°55′E
Official languages Romanian (also called Moldovan)[1][2]
Recognized minority
languages
Gagauz
Russian
Ukrainian
Ethnic groups (2014; excluding Transnistria) 75.1% Moldovan1
7.0% Romanian
6.6% Ukrainian
4.6% Gagauz
4.1% Russian
1.9% Bulgarian
0.7% Other[3]
Demonym Moldovan, Moldavian
Government Parliamentary republic
 -  President Maia Sandu
 -  Prime Minister Natalia Gavrilița
 -  President of the Parliament Igor Grosu
Consolidation
 -  Declaration of Sovereignty June 23, 1990 
 -  Declaration of Independence (from the Soviet Union)
August 27, 19912 
Area
 -  Total 33,846 km² (138th)
13,067 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) 1.4
(incl. Transnistria)
Population
 -  July 2021 estimate 3,323,875 [3] (133rd)
 -  Density 85.5/km² (125th)
234/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2021 estimate
 -  Total Green Arrow Up (Darker).png $36.886 billion[4] (134th)
 -  Per capita Green Arrow Up (Darker).png $14,257[4] (118th)
GDP (nominal) 2021 estimate
 -  Total Green Arrow Up (Darker).png $12.396 billion[4] (144th)
 -  Per capita Green Arrow Up (Darker).png $4,791[4] (123rd)
Gini (2018) 25.7[5] 
Currency Moldovan leu (MDL)
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 -  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Internet TLD .md
Calling code [[+373]]
1 There is a controversy whether Moldovans and Romanians are the same of different ethnic groups.
2 Proclaimed. Finalized along with the dissolution of the USSR in December 1991.


The Republic of Moldova (Republica Moldova) is a landlocked country in Eastern Europe, located between Romania to the west and Ukraine to the north, east and south.

Historically part of the Principality of Moldavia, it was annexed by the Russian Empire in 1812, and when the Russian Empire dissolved in 1918, it united with other Romanian lands in Romania. After being occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940, and changing hands in 1941 and 1944 during World War II, it was known as the Moldavian SSR until 1991.

Moldova declared its independence from the Soviet Union on August 27, 1991, and although it has been independent since then, Russian forces have remained on Moldovan territory east of the Dniester River despite signing international obligations to withdraw.

Moldova has had a long and stormy history. There is ongoing controversy concerning the identity of Moldovans and Romanians. Soviet-era agricultural practices have contaminated the environment. Moldova remains the poorest country in Europe—the presence of an illegal separatist regime in the Transnistria region continues to drag on the economy.

Geography

General map of Moldova
View of the Dniester river in Tiraspol.
Chişinău city center.

At 13,067 square miles (33,843 square kilometers) Moldova is slightly larger than Maryland in the United States. The western border is formed by the Prut river, which joins the Danube before flowing into the Black Sea. In the north-east, the Dniester is the main river, flowing through the country from north to south.

The country is landlocked, even though it is close to the Black Sea. Most of Moldova's territory is a hilly plain cut deeply by many streams and rivers. Elevations never exceed 1410 feet (430 meters)—the highest point being the Dealul Bălăneşti at 1410 feet.

Moldova's proximity to the Black Sea gives it a mild and sunny climate. The summers are warm and long, with temperatures averaging about 68°F (20°C), and the winters are relatively mild and dry, with January temperatures averaging 24.8°F (-4°C). Annual rainfall, which ranges from around 24 inches (600 millimeters) in the north to 16 inches (400mm) in the south, can vary greatly; long dry spells are not unusual. The heaviest rainfall occurs in early summer and again in October; heavy showers and thunderstorms are common. Because of the irregular terrain, heavy summer rains often cause erosion and river silting.

Drainage in Moldova is to the south, toward the Black Sea lowlands, and eventually into the Black Sea, but only eight rivers extend more than 100 kilometers. Moldova's main river, the Dniester, is navigable throughout almost the entire country, and in warmer winters it does not freeze over. The Prut River is a tributary of the Danube River, which it joins at the far southwestern tip of the country.

Underground water, extensively used for the republic's water supply, includes about 2,200 natural springs. The terrain favors construction of reservoirs.

About 75 percent of Moldova is covered by a soil type called "black earth" or chernozem. In the northern highlands, more clay–textured soils are found; in the south, red-earth soil is predominant. The soil becomes less fertile toward the south but can still support grape and sunflower production. Moldova's rich soil and temperate continental climate have made the country one of the most productive agricultural regions and a major supplier of agricultural products in the region.

Originally forested with virgin oak and beech forests called “Codru,” it was extensively de-forested for agriculture during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Moldovan fauna includes about 14,800 species, out of which 461 species of vertebrates (70 mammals, 281 birds, 14 reptiles, 14 amphibians, 82 types of fish) and 14,339 species of invertebrates, including some 12,000 species of insects.

Landslides are a frequently occurring natural hazard. Moldova's Soviet-era agricultural practices such as overuse of pesticides and artificial fertilizers were intended to increase agricultural output without regard for the consequences. As a result, Moldova's soil and groundwater were contaminated by lingering chemicals, some of which (including DDT) have been banned in the West. In addition, poor farming methods, such as destroying forests to plant vineyards, have contributed to the extensive soil erosion to which the country's rugged topography is already prone.

Chişinău is the capital city and industrial and commercial center of Moldova. The largest city of Moldova and is located in the center of the country, on the river Bîc. Economically, the city is the most prosperous in Moldova and is one of the main industrial centers and transportation hubs of the region. Other cities are Tiraspol (in Transnistria), Bălţi, and Tighina.

History

Moldova, known in the past as Bessarabia and Moldavia, has a long and stormy history. The territory has been inhabited for thousands of years. The Indo-European invasion occurred around the year 2000 B.C.E. The original inhabitants were Cimmerians, and after them came Scythians. The people who settled in this area would later become the Dacians, Getae and Thyrsagetae, these being Thracian tribes.

In the seventh century B.C.E., Greek settlers established colonies in the region, mostly along the Black Sea coast and traded with the locals. Also, Celts settled in the southern region, their main city being Aliobrix later called Budjak.

Romans resisted

Dacian Kingdom, during the rule of Burebista, 82 B.C.E.

The first state that included the whole of Moldova was the Dacian kingdom of Burebista, a contemporary of Julius Caesar, in the first century B.C.E. After his death, the state was divided into smaller pieces and was only unified in the Dacian kingdom of Decebalus in the first century C.E. Although this kingdom was defeated by the Roman Empire in 106 C.E., it was never part of the empire and the Free Dacians resisted the Roman conquerors. The Romans built defensive earthen walls in the south to defend the Scythia Minor province against invasions.

The Roman Empire romanized parts of Dacia (via colonization and cultural influence) and some of the local tribes adopted the Latin language and customs. According to the theory of the Daco-Roman continuity, the Latin culture and the Romance language (Romanian) would later spread to encompass the cultural area of the ancient Dacians, including the region of Bessarabia. Some historians deny this continuity of Latin-speaking people north of the Danube.

The Dark Ages

Lying on one of the principal land routes into Europe, from the third century until the eleventh century, the region was invaded numerous times. In 270, the Roman authorities began to withdraw their forces from Dacia, due to the invading Goths and Carps. The Goths, a Germanic tribe, poured into the Roman Empire through Budjak (in present day Ukraine), which due to its geographic position and characteristics (mainly steppe), was swept by various nomadic tribes. From the fifth century it was overrun in turn by the Huns, the Avars, and the Bulgars. Those centuries were characterized by a terrible state of insecurity and mass movement of people, and later came to be known as the "Dark Ages" of Europe.

In 561, the Avars captured the territory and executed the local ruler Mesamer. Following Avars, Slavs started to arrive in the region and establish settlements. Then, in 582, Onogur Bulgars settled in south-eastern Bessarabia and northern Dobruja, from which they moved to Moesia under pressure from the Khazars and formed the region of Bulgaria. With the rise of the Khazars' state in the east, the invasions began to diminish and it was possible to create larger states. The southern part of Moldova remained under the influence of the First Bulgarian Empire until to the end of ninth century.

Between the eighth and tenth centuries, the southern part of Moldova was inhabited by people from Balkan-Dunabian culture (the culture of the First Bulgarian Empire). Between the ninth and thirteenth centuries, Bessarabia is mentioned in European and Slav chronicles as part of Bolohoveni (north) and Brodnici (south) Voevodates, believed to be Vlach (Romanian) principalities of the early Middle Ages. Part of the area came under the rule of Kievan Rus between the tenth and twelfth centuries and later passed to the Galician princes.

The Tatar (Mongolian) invasions of 1241 and 1290 led to a retreat of a big part of the population to the Eastern Carpathians and to Transylvania. From 1241 to the fourteenth century Moldavia was vassal state to the Tatars. The Mongols were defeated 1343.

Principality of Moldavia

During Wallachian rule, of Southern Bessarabia acquired its name. (1390 map)
Cetatea Alba was one of the many important castles built by Moldavia in Bessarabia

The Genoese founded fortified commercial outposts on the Dniester in the fourteenth century, paving the way for contact with Western culture. The region was included in the principality of Moldavia, which by 1392 established control over the fortresses of Cetatea Albă and Chilia, its eastern border becoming the river Dnister. In the latter part of the fourteenth century, the southern part of the region was for several decades part of Wallachia. The main dynasty of Walachia was called Basarab, from which the name Bessarabia originated.

In the fifteenth century, the entire region was a part of the principality of Moldavia. Ştefan cel Mare (Stephen the Great) ruled between 1457 and 1504, a period of nearly 50 years during which he won 32 battles defending his country against virtually all his neighbors (mainly the Ottomans and the Tatars, but also the Hungarians and the Poles), while losing only two. During this period, after each victory, he raised a monastery or a church close to the battlefield honoring Christianity. Many of these battlefields and churches, as well as old fortresses are situated in Moldova (along the Dniester river).

Turkish invasion

Stephen the Great, a miniature from the 1473 Gospel at Humor Monastery.

In 1484, the Turks invaded and captured Chilia and Cetatea Albă (Akkerman in Turkish). This conquest was ratified by treaty (in 1503 and 1513), which annexed the shoreline southern part of Bessarabia, which was then divided into two sanjaks (districts) of the Ottoman Empire. In 1538, the Ottomans annexed more Bessarabian land in the south as far as Tighina, while the central and northern parts of Bessarabia, as part of the principality of Moldavia was formally a vassal of the Ottoman Empire.

Russian administration

The location of the principality of Moldavia. (1800 map, Moldavia in dark orange)

Beginning with Peter I (the Great), the Russians occupied Moldavia five times between 1711 and 1812, during wars between the Ottoman Empire, Russia, and Austria. By the Treaty of Bucharest of May 28, 1812—concluding the Russo-Turkish War, 1806-1812—the Ottoman Empire ceded the eastern half of the Principality of Moldavia to the Russian Empire. That region was then called Bessarabia. Before that year, the name was used only for the southern area, which had been under direct Ottoman control since 1484.

At the end of the Crimean War, in 1856, by the Treaty of Paris, two districts of southern Bessarabia were returned to Moldavia, and The Russian Empire lost access to the Danube river. Many localities, including Chişinău (Kishinev), were in the border area. In 1859, Moldavia and Wallachia united as the Kingdom of Romania, including the southern part of Bessarabia.

The Romanian War of Independence was fought in 1877-1878, with the help of the Russian allies. Although the treaty of alliance between Romania and Russia specified that Russia would respect the territorial integrity of Romania and not claim any part of Romania at the end of the war, by the Treaty of Berlin, the Southern part of Bessarabia again came under the control of Russia.

The Russians granted autonomy in 1818 which remained until 1828. A Moldavian boyar had been made governor and a Moldavian archbishop installed. However, Moldavian peasants fled across the Prut, to avoid any introduction of serfdom. A zemstvo system, introduced in 1869, provided some local autonomy. A policy of Russification in civil and ecclesiastical administration was pursued. Tsarist policy aimed at de-nationalization of the Romanian element by forbidding—after the 1860s—education and Mass in Romanian language, but the effect was a low literacy rate (approximately 40 percent for males, and 10 percent for females).

Russian Tsarist authorities brought colonists such as Gagauz and Bulgars from the Ottoman Empire, Ukrainians from Podolia, Germans from the Rhine regions, and encouraged the settlement of Lipovans from Russia, Jews from Podolia and Galicia, as well as Russian nobles or retired military.

Carol I was crowned King of Romania on March 26, 1881. This formed a focus for Moldavian nationalism, but no active movement developed in Bessarabia until after the Russian Revolution of 1905. Chisinau flourished, although its large Jewish population suffered in a pogrom in 1903.

World War I and the Russian Revolution

Moldavian ASSR and Romania

Romania fought as Russia's ally during World War I. Bessarabia proclaimed support for the moderate Socialist Revolutionary Aleksandr Kerensky in March 1917, and in April the National Moldavian Committee demanded autonomy, land reform, and the use of the Romanian language. In November 1917, a council known as the Sfatul Tarii (Sfat) was set up modeled on the Kiev Rada. On December 15, 1917, the Sfat proclaimed Bessarabia an autonomous constituent republic of the Federation of Russian Republics.

Disorder caused by revolutionary Russian soldiers prompted the Sfat to seek Romanian military help, which prompted a Bolshevik occupied Chisinau in January 1918. Romanian forces drove the Bolsheviks out within two weeks, and on February 6 the Sfat proclaimed Bessarabia an independent Moldavian republic, cutting ties with Russia. Bessarabia united with the Kingdom of Romania the same year, and the union was recognized by a treaty, that was part of the Paris Peace Conference, signed on October 28, 1920, by Romania, Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan. Transnistria did not join Romania.

Moldavian ASSR created

The Soviet Union, created in December 1922, did not recognize Romania's right to the province, and in 1924 it established the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic on land to the east of the Dniester River in the Ukrainian SSR. The Soviet government in 1924 established the Moldavian Autonomous Oblast, the capital of which was Balta, situated in present-day Ukraine. Seven months later, the oblast was upgraded to the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Moldavian ASSR), even though its population was only 30 percent ethnic Romanian. The capital remained at Balta until 1929, when it was moved to Tiraspol. The frontier along the Dniester river was closed,

The area was quickly industrialized, and because of the lack of a qualified workforce and engineering and pedagogical cadres, a significant migration from other Soviet republics occurred, predominantly Ukrainians and Russians. In particular, in 1928, of 14,300 industrial workers only about 600 were Moldovans. Collectivization in MASSR was complete by summer 1931. This was accompanied by the deportation of about 2000 families to Kazakhstan.

In 1925, MASSR survived a famine, followed by the great famine of 1932-1933 (known as the Holodomor in Ukraine), with tens of thousands of Ukrainians and Romanians dying of starvation. During the famine thousands of inhabitants tried to escape over Dniester, despite the threat of being shot. On February 23, 1932, the most notable such incident happened near the village Olăneşti, when 40 persons were shot. This was reported in European newspapers by survivors. The Soviet side reported this as an escape of "kulak elements subdued by Romanian propaganda."

Romanian Bessarabia

Despite Romanian government land reforms that limited the maximum holding to 247 acres (100 hectares), Romanian Bessarabia languished economically, partly as a result of a closed border along the Dniester and the loss of Odessa as a port.

World War II

On June 28, 1940, in accordance with the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact with Nazi Germany, Soviet troops marched in forcing Romania to evacuate its administration from Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina. On July 11, Transnistria (where ethnic Romanians were the largest ethnic group), was joined to part of the autonomous Moldavian republic across the Dniester to form, in August, a Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic (S.S.R.), coterminous with the present-day Moldova, with Chisinau as its capital. The southern and northern parts (which had significant Slavic and Turkic minorities) were transferred to the Ukrainian SSR.

Under an agreement between Germany and the Soviet Union, many Moldavians left, some Jews entered, and the whole German population was moved to western Poland. In July 1941, Romania, Germany's ally against the Soviet Union, reoccupied Bessarabia. By December 1942, it was governed as Romanian territory, although not formally annexed. Moldavian peasants from Transnistria, a new Romanian province between the Dniester and the Southern Buh, were settled on the farms of departed Germans. Numerous Jews were killed or deported.

The Moldavian SSR

The Soviet Union occupied Bessarabia in 1944, and the territory remained part of the USSR after WWII as the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. Controlled from Moscow, the Communist Party promoted industrialization and the collectivization of agriculture, abolishing private ownership of land, and of the means of production and distribution. Secret police struck at nationalist groups. A wave of repression was aimed at the Romanian intellectuals who decided to remain in Moldova after the war and propaganda was directed against everything that was Romanian. Ethnic Russians and Ukrainians were encouraged to immigrate to the Moldavian SSR, especially to Transnistria. At the same time, most of the Moldovan industry was built in Transnistria, while in Bessarabia mostly agriculture was developed.

Government requisitioning of large amounts of agricultural products despite a poor harvest - induced a famine - with 300,000 victims - following the catastrophic drought of 1945-1947, and political and academic positions were given to members of non-Romanian ethnic groups (only 14 percent of the Moldavian SSR's political leaders were ethnic Romanians in 1946).

The conditions imposed became the basis of deep resentment toward Soviet authorities. During Leonid I. Brezhnev's 1950-1952 tenure as the First Secretary of the Communist Party of Moldavia (CPM), he put down a rebellion of ethnic Romanians by killing or deporting thousands of people and instituting forced collectivization.

However, during Brezhnev's tenure as the effective ruler of the USSR from 1964 to 1982, Moldova received substantial investment from the USSR to develop industrial, scientific facilities, as well as housing.

Popular front formed

Distribution of ethnic groups in Moldavian SSR, 1989

Although Brezhnev and other CPM first secretaries were largely successful in suppressing Moldovan/Romanian nationalism, Mikhail Gorbachev's administration facilitated the revival of the movement in the region. Gorbachev was the last leader of the Soviet Union, serving from 1985 until its collapse in 1991. His attempts at reform helped end the Cold War, ended the political supremacy of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), and dissolved the Soviet Union. His policies of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (economic restructuring) created conditions in which national feelings could be openly expressed and in which the Soviet republics could consider reforms.

The Moldovan Popular Front (commonly called the Popular Front), an association of independent cultural and political groups, formed in 1989. Large demonstrations by ethnic Romanians led to Romanian being designated the official language and the head of the CPM replaced. However, the increasing influence of ethnic Romanians, especially in Transnistria, prompted Slavic minorities to form the Yedinstvo-Unitatea (Unity) Intermovement in 1988, and in the south, the Gagauz, a Turkic-speaking minority, formed Gagauz Halkî (Gagauz People), in 1989.

The first democratic elections to the Moldavian SSR's Supreme Soviet were held on February 25, 1990. The Popular Front won a majority. Mircea Snegur, a communist, was elected chairman of the Supreme Soviet, and in September he became president of the republic. The reformist government that took over in May 1990 made changes that did not please the minorities, including changing the republic's name to the Soviet Socialist Republic of Moldova.

Gagauzia and Transnistria secede

In August 1990, the Gagauz declared a separate "Gagauz Republic" (Gagauz-Yeri) in the south, around the city of Comrat. In September the people on the east bank of the Dniester River (with mostly Slavic population) proclaimed the "Dnestr Moldavian Republic" (commonly called the "Dnestr Republic") in Transnistria, with its capital at Tiraspol. Although the Supreme Soviet immediately declared these declarations null, both "republics" went on to hold elections. Meanwhile, approximately 50,000 armed Moldovan nationalist volunteers went to Transnistria, where widespread violence was temporarily averted by the intervention of the Russian 14th Army, headquartered in Chişinău.

Transnistria declares independence

The part of Moldova east of the Dniester River, Transnistria, declared independence from Moldova, but within the Soviet Union on September 2, 1990, as the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. The inhabitants, which included a larger proportion of ethnic Russians and Ukrainians, feared the rise of nationalism in Moldova and the country's expected unification with Romania at the dissolution of the USSR. The declaration was declared void by then-Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.

Moldova declares independence

Map of a proposed unified Romanian-Moldovan state: the so-called "Belkovski proposal" (a Romanian-Moldovan political union excluding Transnistria).

In May 1991, the country's official name was changed to the Republic of Moldova (Republica Moldova). The name of the Supreme Soviet also was changed, to the Moldovan Parliament. During the 1991 August coup d'état in Moscow against Mikhail Gorbachev, commanders of the Soviet Union's Southwestern Theater of Military Operations attempted to impose a state of emergency in Moldova. They were overruled by the Moldovan government, which declared its support for Russian president Boris Yeltsin, who led the counter-coup in Moscow. On August 27, 1991, after the coup's collapse, Moldova declared its independence from the Soviet Union.

Romania was the first state to recognize the independent Republic of Moldova – only a few hours, in fact, after the declaration of independence was issued by the Moldovan parliament. Movements for unification of Romania and the Republic of Moldova began in each country. In December of 1991, Moldova became a member of the post-Soviet Commonwealth of Independent States along with most of the former Soviet republics. Declaring itself a neutral state, it did not join the commonwealth's military branch. At the end of that year, an ex-communist reformer, Mircea Snegur, won an unchallenged election for the presidency. Three months later, the country achieved formal recognition as an independent state at the United Nations.

In mid April 1992, in accordance with the agreements concerning the split of the military equipment of the former Soviet Union, Moldova created its own Defense Ministry. Most of the 14th Soviet Army's military equipment was to be retained by Moldova. In October, Moldova began to organize its own armed forces. The Soviet Union was falling apart quickly, and Moldova had to rely on itself to prevent the spread of violence from the "Dnestr Republic" to the rest of the country.

War of Transnistria

In March 1992, a brief war between Moldovan and Transnistrian separatist forces started in the region. Volunteers came from Russia and Ukraine to help the separatist side. A ceasefire was negotiated by presidents Mircea Snegur and Boris Yeltsin in July. A demarcation line was to be maintained by a tripartite peacekeeping force (composed of Moldovan, Russian, and Transnistrian forces), and Moscow agreed to withdraw its 14th Army if a suitable constitutional provision were made for Transnistria. Also, Transnistria would have a special status within Moldova and would have the right to secede if Moldova decided to reunite with Romania.

Communists dominate different coalitions

During the first ten years of independence, Moldova was governed by coalitions of different parties, lead mostly by former communist officials. On July 28, 1992, Parliament ratified a new constitution, which went into effect August 27, 1994, and provided substantial autonomy to Transnistria and to Gagauzia. Russia and Moldova signed an agreement in October 1994 on the withdrawal of Russian troops from Transnistria, but the Russian government did not ratify it and another stalemate ensued. Although the cease-fire remained in effect, further negotiations that included the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe and the United Nations made little progress.

The Partnership and Cooperation Agreement with the European Union (EU) came into force in July 1998 for an initial period of ten years. It established the institutional framework for bilateral relations, set the principal common objectives, and called for activities and dialogue in a number of policy areas.

In the 2001 elections, the Communist Party of Moldova won the majority of seats in the parliament and appointed Vladimir Voronin as president. Relationships between Moldova and Russia deteriorated in November 2003 over the Transnistrian conflict. In the following election, held in 2005, the Communist party made a 180 degree turn and was re-elected on a pro-Western platform, with Voronin being re-elected to a second term as a president.

Government and politics

Government Building in Chişinău.

The 1994 constitution, which replaced the 1978 framework for a Soviet-style government, established Moldova as a parliamentary democracy, with a unicameral parliament of 104 members directly elected for four-year terms. The president, who is directly elected for a five-year term, and is the head of state and the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The president shares executive power with the Council of Ministers (cabinet), which is led by the prime minister, who is designated by the president (after consultation with the parliamentary majority) and approved by parliament. The council implements domestic and foreign policy.

The position of the break-away republic of Transnistria, relations with Romania, and integration into the European Union dominate the political agenda.

The judicial system comprises the Supreme Court of Justice (with members appointed by parliament), a Court of Appeal, and lower courts (whose members are appointed by the president). The Higher Magistrates' Council nominates judges and oversees their transfer and promotion.

Administrative divisions

Administrative divisions of Moldova

Moldova is divided into 32 districts (raioane, singular raion); three municipalities (Bălţi, Chişinău, Tighina); and two autonomous regions (Găgăuzia and Transnistria). The cities of Comrat and Tiraspol also have municipality status, however not as first-tier subdivisions of Moldova, but as parts of the regions of Găgăuzia and Transnistria, respectively.

Transnistria is legally a part of Moldova, as its independence is not recognized by any country, although in fact it is not controlled by the Moldovan government. It is administered by an unrecognized breakaway authority seeking closer ties with Russia, and its status remains disputed.

Elected district councils coordinate elected town and village councils and mayors who administer local government. The constitution guarantees the right to “preserve, develop and express citizens' ethnic, cultural, and linguistic and religious identity” and grants special autonomy to the Russian region on the left bank of the Dniester and to the Gagauz region.

Relations with Romania

In 1989, Romanian became the official language of Moldova, and after independence in 1991, the Romanian tricolor with a coat-of-arms (inspired by the coat of arms of Romania) was used as the flag, and the Romanian national anthem became the anthem of Moldova. Certain groups in both countries expected unification, and a Movement for unification of Romania and the Republic of Moldova began in both countries. Dual citizenship became an increasingly important issue following the 2003 local elections, and in November 2003, the Moldovan parliament passed a law that allowed Moldovans to acquire dual citizenship.

However, the initial enthusiasm in Moldova was tempered and, starting in 1993, Moldova started to distance itself from Romania. The constitution adopted in 1994 used the term "Moldovan language" instead of "Romanian" and changed the national anthem to Limba noastră. The 1996 attempt by Moldovan president Mircea Snegur to change the official language to "Romanian" was dismissed by the Moldovan Parliament as "promoting Romanian expansionism."

Military

The military consists of ground forces, rapid reaction forces, air and air defense forces. Moldova has accepted all relevant arms control obligations of the former Soviet Union. On October 30, 1992, Moldova ratified the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe, which establishes comprehensive limits on key categories of conventional military equipment and provides for the destruction of weapons in excess of those limits. It acceded to the provisions of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in October 1994 in Washington, DC. It does not have nuclear, biological, or chemical weapons. Moldova joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation's Partnership for Peace on March 16, 1994.

Foreign relations

A government building.

Moldova has officially been a neutral country since its independence, and an early member of the NATO Partnership for Peace. The government has stated that Moldova has European aspirations but there has been little progress toward EU membership. On May 1, 2004, many EU enthusiasts waving the EU flags found their flags confiscated by police and some were arrested under the clause of "anti-nationalism." A Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) with EU is the legal basis for EU relations with Moldova. The PCA came into force in July 1998 for an initial period of ten years. Romanian President Traian Basescu is one of the strong advocates (at the EU level) for Moldova's bid to join the European Union. In June 2007 the Republic of Moldova joined the International Parliament for Safety and Peace.

Human rights

According to Amnesty International's 2007 annual report, torture and ill-treatment were widespread and conditions in pre-trial detention were poor. A number of treaties protecting women's rights were ratified, but men, women and children continued to be trafficked for forcible sexual and other exploitation and measures to protect women against domestic violence were inadequate. Constitutional changes to abolish the death penalty were made. Freedom of expression was restricted and opposition politicians were targeted.

The United States Senate has held committee hearings on irregularities that marred elections in Moldova, including the arrest and harassment of opposition candidates, intimidation and suppression of independent media, and state run media bias in favor of candidates backed by the Moldovan Government.

Economy

Chişinău Train Station.
Moldovan leu.
Most of the vineyards in Moldova are located on south facing slopes.

Moldova remains one of the poorest countries in Europe. It has a favorable climate and good farmland but has no major mineral deposits. As a result, the economy depends heavily on agriculture, featuring fruits, vegetables, wine, and tobacco. Moldova must import almost all of its energy supplies. Moldova's dependence on Russian energy was underscored at the end of 2005, when a Russian-owned electrical station in Moldova's separatist Transnistria region cut off power to Moldova and Russia's Gazprom cut off natural gas to Moldova in disputes over pricing.

Economic reforms have been slow because of corruption and strong political forces backing government controls; nevertheless, the government's primary goal of EU integration has resulted in some market-oriented progress. The economy remains vulnerable to higher fuel prices, poor agricultural weather, and the skepticism of foreign investors. Also, the presence of an illegal separatist regime in Moldova's Transnistria region continues to be a drag on the Moldovan economy.

Export commodities include foodstuffs, textiles, and machinery. Export partners include Russia, Germany, Italy, Romania, Ukraine, and Belarus.

Import commodities include mineral products and fuel, machinery and equipment, chemicals, and textiles. Import partner include Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Germany, Italy, and Poland.

Demographics

Traditionally a rural country, Moldova gradually began changing its character under Soviet rule. As urban areas became the sites of new industrial jobs and of amenities such as clinics, the population of cities and towns grew. The new residents were not only ethnic Moldovans who had moved from rural areas but also many ethnic Russians and Ukrainians who had been recruited to fill positions in industry and government. Although Moldova is by far the most densely populated of the former Soviet republics, it has few large cities.

Ethnicity

One of Moldova's characteristic traits is its ethnic diversity. The definition of ethnic groups is the subject of an ongoing dispute. The main controversy concerns the identity between Moldovans and Romanians, as well as between the corresponding Moldovan and Romanian languages. The distinction between Moldovans and Romanians has been a greatly disputed political issue with one side arguing that Moldovans constitute an ethnic group separate from the Romanian ethnos, whereas others claim that Moldovans in both Romania and Moldova are simply a subgroup of the Romanian ethnos, similar to Transylvanians, Oltenians, and other groups.

Religion

Moldavian Orthodox church
Hâncu monastery.
The ceiling (cupola) of Hancu monastery, founded in 1678.

The majority of Moldovans are Christian, almost all Eastern Orthodox. Orthodox Christians were not required in the census to declare the particular church they belong to. The Moldovan Orthodox Church, subordinated to the Russian Orthodox Church, and the Orthodox Church of Bessarabia, autonomous and subordinated to the Romanian Orthodox Church, both claim to be the national church of the country.

The Soviet government strictly limited the activities of the Orthodox Church (and all religions) and at times sought to exploit it, with the ultimate goal of destroying it and all religious activity. Most Orthodox churches and monasteries in Moldova were demolished or converted to other uses, such as warehouses, and clergy were sometimes punished for leading services. But many believers continued to practice their faith in secret.

In 1991 Moldova had 853 Orthodox churches and eleven Orthodox monasteries (four for monks and seven for nuns). In addition, the Old Russian Orthodox Church had 14 churches and one monastery in Moldova.

There is no state religion, although the Moldovan Orthodox Church receives some favored treatment from the current government. The constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the government generally respects this right in practice; however, the 1992 Law on Religions, which codifies religious freedoms, contains restrictions that inhibit the activities of unregistered religious groups.

Before the Holocaust, the country had a substantial Jewish community, seven percent, or slightly over 200,000, in 1930. In June-July 1941 approximately two thirds of the Jews fled (mostly in miserable conditions) to the interior of the USSR (Uzbekistan, Siberia, other regions) before the retreat of the Soviet troops. In 1941-1942, approximately one third of the Bessarabian Jews (alongside Jews from several other districts of Romania) were deported to ghettos and labor camps in Transnistria (WWII), where more than half perished in extreme conditions. Approximately 10,000 Jews (both military and civilians) were executed during the military action in June-July 1941 by German Einsatzkommando D, and (at least on four occasions) by Romanian troops. By mid 1942 fewer than 20,000 Jews remained in the region. After the Soviets took back the region in 1944, most of the Bessarabian Jews returned. During the Soviet period some Jews from Moldova moved to other parts of the former USSR, while some Jews from other regions moved to Moldova. During late 1980s and 1990s, there was mass migration of Jews to Israel, with a total number of emigrants estimated at over 100,000. Only a very small Jewish population remains in Moldova.

Language

Major varieties of the Romanian language.

The state language, according to Title I, Article 13 of the Moldovan Constitution, is Moldovan. In Moldova's Declaration of Independence, the same language is called Romanian. There is no particular linguistic break at the Prut River, which divides Moldova from Romania. Linguistically, Moldovan is considered one of the five major spoken dialects of Romanian, all five being written identically. In formal use, the languages are identical except for minor orthographical issues. There is, however, some regional variation, as might be found within any linguistic territory, and the common speech of areas such as Chişinău or Transnistria can be distinguished from the speech of Iaşi, a Romanian city that is also part of the former Principality of Moldavia, while the difference in the common speech between Iaşi and the capital of Romania Bucharest is even greater. In general, before 1988-1989, the less educated, the greater the difference from standard Romanian, and the more words were borrowed ad hoc from Russian into the daily speech. A significant minority speaks Russian, and there are more Slavicisms in common speech in Moldova than in common speech in Romania.

In some cases Russian is used alongside Moldovan (Romanian) within state institutions, despite not having legal status. This is generally in direct relation to the political context in the government, which can be either pro-Russian or pro-Romanian/pro-Western. In Transnistria, the breakaway authorities consider its old Cyrillic form co-official with Russian and Ukrainian, and persecute inhabitants who use the standard Latin alphabet.

Marriage and the family

When a young couple decides to marry, the girl often will go and stay at her future husband's home. Her parents are informed the next day, and the families meet to agree on the marriage, which may take place a couple of months later. Newlyweds live together with the groom's parents until they can get their own home. In the villages, the youngest son and his family live with the parents, and he inherits the house and contents. Otherwise, children inherit equally from their parents. Godparents are responsible for their godchildren through marriage and building a house.

Education

Bessarabia was one of the least-developed, and least-educated European regions of the Russian Empire. In 1930, its literacy rate was only 40 percent, according to a Romanian census. Although Soviet authorities promoted education in order to spread communist ideology, they also did everything they could to break the region's cultural ties with Romania.

The Soviet regime eradicated illiteracy and emphasized technical education to produce specialists and a highly skilled workforce for agriculture and industry. Before 1940 the republic had only one tertiary institute, a teacher-training college. By 2005, there were 16 state and 14 private institutions of higher education, with a total of 126,100 students, including 104,300 in the state, and 21,700 in the private ones.

The Moldova Academy of Sciences, established in Chisinau in 1961, coordinates the activities of some 16 scientific institutions. There are at least 50 centers researching viticulture, horticulture, beet growing, grain cultivation, and wine making.

Class

Large landowners (boyars) disappeared after the Soviet regime was established. After the Soviet Union collapsed, there emerged a wealthy class composed of former Soviet high-ranking officials, who appropriated state funds, and young entrepreneurs who amassed wealth on the introduction of a market economy. Moldovans tend to have higher positions in the government, while Russians dominate the private sector. New ornamented houses and villas, cars, cellphones, and fashionable clothes symbolize wealth. Consumer goods brought from abroad (Turkey, Romania, Germany) function as status symbols in cities and rural areas.

Culture

Triumphal Arch and Orthodox Cathedral, central Chişinău.
Căpriana monastery.

The culture of Moldova has been influenced by its Romanian origin, the roots of which reach back to the second century C.E., the period of Roman colonization in Dacia. During the Soviet era, the state directed cultural and intellectual life, meaning the theatre, motion pictures, television, and printed matter were censored and closely scrutinized.

Architecture

Chişinău's city center, built in the nineteenth century by the Russians, features a neoclassical style of architecture. While there are numerous small one-story houses in the center, the outskirts are dominated by Soviet-style residential buildings. Small towns combine Soviet-style administration buildings and apartment blocks with typical Moldovan, Ukrainian, Gagauz, Bulgarian, or German houses, depending on their original inhabitants. Each house has a garden, a vineyard, and are surrounded by low metal ornamented bars.

Art

Sixteenth-century icons are the oldest examples of Moldovan graphic arts. Early twentieth century sculptor Alexandru Plămădeală and architect A. Şciusev contributed to the heritage of Bessarabian arts. Nineteenth and twentieth century Bessarabian painters worked on landscape paintings as well as Soviet realism. Since independence, artists including Valeriu Jabinski, Iuri Matei, Andrei Negur, and Gennadi Teciuc have appeared. Folk traditions, including ceramics and weaving, continue to be practiced in rural areas.

Cuisine and wine

Mămăligă

The national dish is mamaliga, a hard corn porridge. It is poured onto a flat surface in the shape of a cake and is served with cheese, sour cream, or milk. Historically a peasant food, it was often used as a substitute for bread or even as a staple food in the poor rural areas. However, in the last decades it has emerged as an upscale dish available in the finest restaurants. Other main foods are a mixture of vegetables and meat (chicken, goose, duck, pork, and lamb), filled cabbage and grape leaves, and zama and Russian borsch soups. Plăcintă is a pastry filled with cheese, potatoes, or cabbage.

Moldova has a well established wine industry. The imprints of Vitis teutonica vine leaves near the Naslavcia village in the north of Moldova, prove that grapes have grown there approximately six to 25 million years ago. The size of the grape seed imprints found near the Varvarovca village and which date to 2800 B.C.E., prove that at that time the grapes were already cultivated. It has a vineyard area of 147,000 hectares (ha), of which 102,500 ha are in commercial production. Most of the country's wine production is for export. Many families have their own recipes and strands of grapes that have been passed on through generations.

Literature

Bogdan P. Hasdeu: photograph and signature
Mihai Eminescu, national poet of Moldova and Romania.

Oral literature and folklore prevailed until the nineteenth century. The first Moldovan books (religious texts) appeared in the mid-seventeenth century. Prince Dimitrie Cantemir (1673-1723), one of the most important figures of Moldavian culture of the eighteenth century, wrote the first geographical, ethnographical and economic description of the country in Descriptio Moldaviae (Berlin, 1714).

Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu (1838—1907) was a Romanian writer and philologist, who pioneered many branches of Romanian philology and history. Hasdeu is considered to have been able to understand 26 languages (many of which he could converse in).

Mihai Eminescu (1850-89) was probably the best-known and most influential Romanian language late romantic poet.

Other prominent figures include author Ion Creangă (1837-1889), Vladimir Besleagă, Pavel Boţu, Aureliu Busuioc, Nicolae Dabija, Ion Druţă, Victor Teleuca and Grigore Vieru. In 1991, a total of 520 books were published in Moldova, of which 402 were in Romanian, 108 in Russian, eight in Gagauz, and two in Bulgarian.

Music

Moldovan music is closely related to that of Romania. Moldovan folk is known for swift, complex rhythms (a characteristic shared with many Eastern European traditions), musical improvisation, syncopation and much melodic ornamentation

During the Soviet era, Moldovan folk culture flourished, and was strongly promoted by the government. However, many elements were altered to obscure the shared history of Romania and Moldova, because the Soviet Union wanted to discourage secessionism. The Mioriţa is ancient ballad that is an important part of Moldovan folk culture.

Theatre

In the early 1990s, Moldova had 12 professional theaters. All performed in Romanian, except the A.P. Chekhov Russian Drama Theater in Chişinău, and the Russian Drama and Comedy Theater in Tiraspol, both of which performed solely in Russian, and the Licurici Republic Puppet Theater (in Chişinău), which performed in both Romanian and Russian. Although, among those controlled tendencies by Soviets, real artists in music formed real art-bands, such as "Ciocîrlia" led by Serghei Lunchevici (Loonkevich),and "Lăutarii" of Nicolae Botgros. Members of ethnic minorities manage a number of folklore groups and amateur theaters throughout the country.

Sport

(Soccer) has traditionally been Moldova's national sport, however, rugby union has risen to become a popular sport with the national team earning promotion to Division one of the European Nations Cup with some brilliant displays attracting many spectators to their matches.

Notes

  1. The text of the Declaration of Independence prevails over the text of the Constitution Constitutional Court of Moldova, December 5, 2013. Retrieved February 25, 2022.
  2. Peter Roudik, Moldova: Romanian Recognized as the Official Language Law Library of Congress, December 23, 2013. Retrieved February 25, 2022.
  3. 3.0 3.1 CIA, Moldova World Factbook. Retrieved February 25, 2022.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Economic Outlook Database, October 2021 Edition International Monetary Fund. Retrieved February 25, 2022.
  5. CIA, Gini Index coefficient World Factbook. Retrieved February 25, 2022.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Aklaev, Airat R., "Dynamics of the Moldova-Trans-Dniestr-Conflict (late 1980s to early 1990s)." In Kumar Rupesinghe and Valeriĭ Aleksandrovich Tishkov, eds. Ethnicity and power in the contemporary world. Tokyo: United Nations University Press, 1996. ISBN 9789280809084
  • Bremmer, Ian, and Ray Taras (eds.). New States, New Politics: Building the Post-Soviet Nations. Cambridge, UK:Cambridge University Press, 1996. ISBN 9780521577991
  • Bruchis, Michael. One step back, two steps forward: on the language policy of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in the national republics: Moldavian, a look back, a survey, and perspectives, 1924-1980. East European monographs, no. 109. Boulder: East European Monographs, 1982. ISBN 9780880330022
  • Bruchis, Michael. The Republic of Moldavia: from the collapse of the Soviet empire to the restoration of the Russian empire. East European monographs, no. 476. Boulder: East European Monographs, 1996. ISBN 9780880333733
  • Chinn, Jeff. "The Case of Transdniestr." In Lena Jonson and Clive Archer. Peacekeeping and the role of Russia in Eurasia. Boulder: Westview Press, 1996. ISBN 9780813389585
  • Eyal, Jonathan. "Moldavians." In Graham Smith, ed. The Nationalities question in the Soviet Union. London: Longman, 1990. ISBN 9780582039551
  • King, Charles. The Moldovans: Romania, Russia, and the Politics of Culture. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0817997922

External links

All links retrieved November 9, 2022.

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